volume 11 issue 3 pages 525-552

Can Nature Hold Rights? It's Not as Easy as You Think

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-11-21
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR0.930
CiteScore5.4
Impact factor3.3
ISSN20471025, 20471033
Law
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
Abstract

The Rights of Nature movement has recently achieved significant successes in using legal personhood as a tool for environmental protection. Perhaps most famously, the Whanganui River in Aotearoa New Zealand was accorded legal personhood in 2017. These kinds of development have attracted plenty of scholarly interest, but few have scrutinized a foundational underlying question: Can natural areas, such as rivers, or other non-sentient natural entities actually be legal persons?

The case of the Whanganui River is an example of the direct legal personhood model: it purports to grant legal rights to the river directly. Some other jurisdictions have set up legal persons to administer rivers, without declaring the rivers themselves to be legal persons: the indirect legal personhood model. This article offers legal-philosophical arguments for why legal personhood cannot be attributed to rivers directly.

Normally, legal persons can hold claim-rights and be legally wronged. Some legal persons, such as human adults, can also be held legally responsible and exercise legal competences by entering into contracts. Natural entities cannot do any of these things. Hence, they cannot be legal persons directly; rather, their putative direct legal personhood will collapse into indirect legal personhood. Hence, treating natural entities as direct legal persons amounts only to a legal fiction. Such fictions may be justified for symbolic reasons. However, if environmental protection requires setting up a legal person to protect a natural entity, such protection in most cases can be realized without claiming that the natural entity itself would have become a legal person.

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GOST |
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GOST Copy
Kurki V. Can Nature Hold Rights? It's Not as Easy as You Think // Transnational Environmental Law. 2022. Vol. 11. No. 3. pp. 525-552.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Kurki V. Can Nature Hold Rights? It's Not as Easy as You Think // Transnational Environmental Law. 2022. Vol. 11. No. 3. pp. 525-552.
RIS |
Cite this
RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1017/s2047102522000358
UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/s2047102522000358
TI - Can Nature Hold Rights? It's Not as Easy as You Think
T2 - Transnational Environmental Law
AU - Kurki, Visa
PY - 2022
DA - 2022/11/21
PB - Cambridge University Press
SP - 525-552
IS - 3
VL - 11
SN - 2047-1025
SN - 2047-1033
ER -
BibTex |
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2022_Kurki,
author = {Visa Kurki},
title = {Can Nature Hold Rights? It's Not as Easy as You Think},
journal = {Transnational Environmental Law},
year = {2022},
volume = {11},
publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
month = {nov},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1017/s2047102522000358},
number = {3},
pages = {525--552},
doi = {10.1017/s2047102522000358}
}
MLA
Cite this
MLA Copy
Kurki, Visa. “Can Nature Hold Rights? It's Not as Easy as You Think.” Transnational Environmental Law, vol. 11, no. 3, Nov. 2022, pp. 525-552. https://doi.org/10.1017/s2047102522000358.