This new book provides ecological, historical, legal, and contextual information about the wide range of seemingly insurmountable challenges we face around the planet. Thankfully, along with in-depth analyses of the problems and causes, the recommended solutions presented seem attainable. The lists of specific recommendations for management, restoration, research, and governance, all emphasize justice. Indeed, The Rights of Nature, as an overarching framework for choice-making at all levels of governance, from personal to global, is a greatly needed manifesto.
-Judith Ann Wait, Washington State University, Vancouver, Washington, USA
This wonderful book proposes a new framing that provides some questions that we need to ask - and some answers that may be the ones we need. One need not subscribe to every argument they offer in this book. But one cannot read this book without opening one's eyes to new insights and new possibilities.
-John E. Bonine, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, USA
As an avid reader, now in my seventies, I have found that only about twice a decade a book comes along that challenges the foundation of what I know and provokes me to think afresh. The Rights of Nature is such a book. La Follette and Maser have used the lens of systems theory to capture the history, ecology, geography, technologies, laws, and politics, as well as challenges and solutions, to the relationships of people to the planet. The book consolidates the complex dimensions of human and natural systems to support a paradigm shift, which embeds the Rights of Nature in national and state constitutions, to create the essential reciprocity between people and the planet.
-Thomas J. Gallagher, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA
We can no longer sit back and expect change to happen. As the living citizens of Earth, it is our duty to protect our home planet for our posterity and for all living creatures. Cameron La Follette and Chris Maser's thinking can complement a public trust approach in the campaign for stewardship, not destruction, of our Earth. A rights of nature approach can lead society towards a new ethic, one calling for restraint and harmony with the natural world we rely on-so that all species, not just humans, can flourish.
-Mary Wood, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, USA
In Sustainability and the Rights of Nature: An Introduction, La Follette and Maser dramatically outline what is at stake if we continue current environmental policies and what approaches are necessary to improve the sustainability of our global lifeboat.
- Timothy D. Schowalter, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA
Sustainability And The Rights Of Nature: An Introduction may be Chris Maser's most ambitious work. In collaboration with attorney Cameron La Follette, the book makes an impassioned and compelling case for the premise that humankind cannot flourish, or perhaps even survive, unless we recognize the primacy of the natural world within which our produced world of goods and artifacts is embedded. Cameron La Follette contributes the vital legal background that allows the book to demonstrate that the task of elevating the Rights of Nature must ultimately be a clear-eyed and practical task that recruits our formal legal systems to the effort. This rich and carefully crafted work makes an impressive and ultimately optimistic contribution to the creation of a humble, but satisfying, human presence on our one and only home planet.
-C. Russell Beaton, Willamette University, Salem, Oregon, USA
This new book provides ecological, historical, legal, and contextual information about the wide range of seemingly insurmountable challenges we face around the planet. Thankfully, along with in-depth analyses of the problems and causes, the recommended solutions presented seem attainable. The lists of specific recommendations for management, restoration, research, and governance, all emphasize justice. Indeed, The Rights of Nature, as an overarching framework for choice-making at all levels of governance, from personal to global, is a greatly needed manifesto.
-Judith Ann Wait, Washington State University, Vancouver, Washington, USA
This wonderful book proposes a new framing that provides some questions that we need to ask - and some answers that may be the ones we need. One need not subscribe to every argument they offer in this book. But one cannot read this book without opening one's eyes to new insights and new possibilities.
-John E. Bonine, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, USA
As an avid reader, now in my seventies, I have found that only about twice a decade a book comes along that challenges the foundation of what I know and provokes me to think afresh. The Rights of Nature is such a book. La Follette and Maser have used the lens of systems theory to capture the history, ecology, geography, technologies, laws, and politics, as well as challenges and solutions, to the relationships of people to the planet. The book consolidates the complex dimensions of human and natural systems to support a paradigm shift, which embeds the Rights of Nature in national and state constitutions, to create the essential reciprocity between people and the planet.
-Thomas J. Gallagher, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA
We can no longer sit back and expect change to happen. As the living citizens of Earth, it is our duty to protect our home planet for our posterity and for all living creatures. Cameron La Follette and Chris Maser's thinking can complement a public trust approach in the campaign for stewardship, not destruction, of our Earth. A rights of nature approach can lead society towards a new ethic, one calling for restraint and harmony with the natural world we rely on-so that all species, not just humans, can flourish.
-Mary Wood, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, USA
In Sustainability and the Rights of Nature: An Introduction, La Follette and Maser dramatically outline what is at stake if we continue current environmental policies and what approaches are necessary to improve the sustainability of our global lifeboat.
- Timothy D. Schowalter, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA
Sustainability And The Rights Of Nature: An Introduction may be Chris Maser's most ambitious work. In collaboration with attorney Cameron La Follette, the book makes an impassioned and compelling case for the premise that humankind cannot flourish, or perhaps even survive, unless we recognize the primacy of the natural world within which our produced world of goods and artifacts is embedded. Cameron La Follette contributes the vital legal background that allows the book to demonstrate that the task of elevating the Rights of Nature must ultimately be a clear-eyed and practical task that recruits our formal legal systems to the effort. This rich and carefully crafted work makes an impressive and ultimately optimistic contribution to the creation of a humble, but satisfying, human presence on our one and only home planet.
-C. Russell Beaton, Willamette University, Salem, Oregon, USA