Abstract
This note argues that the United Nations should center nature’s rights in the upcoming Global Pact on the Environment, solidifying the patchwork of international environmental law and encouraging domestic protection of the environment. Part II explores the current state of international environmental law, outlining the ways in which the doctrine remains incomplete. Part III establishes that Earth jurisprudence is an effective method to fill the gaps existing within traditional international environmental law. Part IV emphasizes the importance of soft law in international law. It draws a parallel between the creation of the Universal Declaration of Human’s Rights and a potential global Declaration of Nature’s Rights, thus establishing the possibility for a path forward for the Global Pact. Part V concludes.
Recommended Citation
Samantha Franks,
The Trees Speak for Themselves: Nature’s Rights Under International Law,
42
Mich. J. Int'l L.
633
(2021).
Available at:
https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjil/vol42/iss3/6