possibly of interest . . . 
cheers,
craig

craig k harris
department of sociology
michigan agricultural experiment station
national food safety and toxicology center
institute for food and agricultural standards
michigan state university
http://www.msu.edu/~harrisc/ 


Richard P. Hiskes.  The Human Right to a Green Future: Environmental
Rights and Intergenerational Justice.  Cambridge  Cambridge
University Press, 2009.  x + 171 pp.  $90.00 (cloth), ISBN
978-0-521-87395-6; $29.99 (paper), ISBN 978-0-521-69614-2.

Reviewed by Kemi Fuentes George (Department of Government, the
College of William and Mary)
Published on H-Human-Rights (December, 2009)
Commissioned by Rebecca K. Root

Creating a Rights-Based Framework for Environmentalism

In _The Human Right to a Green Future_, Richard Hiskes argues that a
clean environment, conceptualized throughout as comprising "clean
air, water, and soil," is a basic human right, and a necessary
component of the notion of justice.  By so doing, Hiskes seeks to
ground environmental claims and activism in a "more muscular
political vocabulary" (p. 2), one which is more likely to persuade
recalcitrant policymakers to take politically and economically costly
steps to carry out green legislation.  The book specifically mentions
climate change, but implies throughout that the conclusions should be
universally applicable across local and global environmental issue
areas.

Of course, linking the environment to international norms on human
rights and justice is not straightforward, and Hiskes anticipates
several theoretical challenges.  The specter of justice and rights
invokes observations that an important element of these concepts is
the presence of reciprocity between the aggrieved and the committer
of aggravation.  In environmental issue-areas where the impacts of
degradation are temporally distant, such a relationship is difficult
to establish; contemporary societies lack the political will to pay
for environmental management for processes still in the future.

Hiskes begins his substantive argument in chapter 2 by locating human
rights as emergent, social rights, rather than as Grotian natural
rights.  In other words, human rights are socially constituted, and
as such, change with society's reconstitution, through the adoption
of new norms, beliefs, and technological change.  At the same time,
the core of human rights is the fact that they are, broadly stated,
"protections from harms that threaten a person's physical well-being,
political equality, or sense of dignity" (p. 36).  This is an
important conceptual turn for his argument.  Degraded water, soil,
and air have clear impacts on people's physical well-being.  At the
same time, our knowledge about environmental degradation is
progressing dynamically, and causal relationships are only recently
becoming clear through development in scientific research methods.
By locating environmental issues in socially generated human rights,
Hiskes argues that, though environmental rights have an element of
permanence, situated in broader rights claims, they can also be
expected to evolve with technology and knowledge.

Chapter 3 further addresses the issue of reciprocity by pointing out
that, conceptually, a strict interpretation of "tit-for-tat"
accountability as a requirement for justice could lead to patently
unjust actions, citing the marginalization of mentally handicapped
individuals.  As such, the inability of future generations to
directly respond to contemporary populations does not preclude a more
abstract notion of reciprocity, and hence does not preclude the
operation of justice between current and future societies.  Hiskes
argues that, as future populations will share our morals and beliefs,
they should be considered as members of the same polity.  By acting
to preserve the environmental rights of future community members,
current societies will be in a better position to defend these
emergent environmental rights, as they become more apparent.
Consequently, there is an element of "reflexive reciprocity," in that
actions taken for future generations have potential benefits for the
present.

Hiskes admits throughout that the focus of a shared communitarian
destiny as a basis for understanding emergent environmental rights is
geographically and culturally limited.  As observed in chapter 4, the
focus on the development of a shared identity between current and
future community members can extend only as far as the boundaries of
the sovereign state.  Although Hiskes argues for a temporally
extended view of justice and rights in promoting environmentalism, he
asserts that emergent environmental rights will have a parochial
element, in that they will focus on the rights of citizens of the
same state.  One immediate objection to this point is that
environmental governance is often global in nature.

Chapter 5 returns to points made earlier in the book to address this
objection.  First, Hiskes suggests that the implementation of
environmental policy takes place at the local level, and as such,
local commitment to environmental norms is essential in fostering
governance.  The need for local action is not obviated by the actions
of external actors.  Second, by forming a basis of a shared identity
between contemporary and future citizens, environmental rights
establishes legitimacy for resistance at the sub-state level to some
of the harmful effects of globalization, including environmental
harms.

Finally, chapters 6 and 7 clarify the primary course of action
desired by Hiskes: the inclusion of environmental rights in
democratic constitutions is a "crucial first step in the guaranteeing
of intergenerational environmental justice" (p. 133).  In addition,
when environmental rights are procedural, such as rights enshrining
public participation in environment-impacting policies, they
reinforce broader democratic and political rights simultaneously.

Overall, the book argues strongly for creating a legal framework for
environmentalism as a component of human rights.  If the implied
program of environmental constitutionalism were adopted, it could
provide a basis for legal activism within states, where
environmentalists would have an increasingly robust set of
international norms to demand accountability and action from
governments.  Finally, although the book focuses on empowering local
actors to demand environmental compliance, the eventual result will
be the reification of universal environmental rights as more states
link environmentalism to broadly held norms on human welfare.  For
environmental studies scholars, advocates, and activists, this
legalist framework provides a basis for generating political will at
the local level for green policy.

Nevertheless, there are weaknesses in the book.  Hiskes indicates
that becoming aware of a shared destiny and morality with future
community members is an important conceptual tool in generating the
political will to preserve environmental rights, but comes
uncomfortably close to tautological reasoning when arguing that
"environmental human rights ... [raise] the consciousness of each
community to its obligations to the future" (pp. 62).  In addition,
the arguments could have been more effectively organized.  The latter
part of chapter 5 revisits the idea that environmental rights are
properly situated within broader human rights norms, such as
self-determination and autonomy, which could have been placed in
earlier chapters to clarify why we should consider a clean
environment as part of the human rights discourse.

More problematic is the apparent conflation of several potential
environmental issues into one concept, the aforementioned "clean air,
water, and soil."  What makes environmental governance so difficult,
particularly in developing countries, is not a lack of commitment to
environmental goods, but rather competing visions of how to balance
between these goods.  For example, the construction of dams may
provide clean drinking water to rural populations, but at the cost of
land conversion.  Linking environmental rights to human rights may
lead to governance issues when different sectors of local populations
have radically different ideas about the appropriate use of
resources.  It would have been useful to have more discussion about
how serious the issue of competing environmental rights claims could
be to the legalist framework presented in the book, and how to
reconcile rights claims with the various conservationist,
preservationist, and utilitarian views of natural resources.

Finally, for international relations scholars, a major challenge to
global environmental governance is the difficulty of delinking
domestic environmental politics from the international arena.  The
governance of acid rain was complicated because some states initially
bore no internal costs for sulfur emissions.  Common pool resources
are difficult to manage because of variations in the costs of
resource depletion.  In addition, some areas in Russia, Canada, and
the United States may realize net benefits from global climate
change.  Overall, these point to the fact that policies taken at the
local level, which lead to increased welfare and rights protection
locally, may still contribute to global environmental degradation.

Citation: Kemi Fuentes George. Review of Hiskes, Richard P., _The
Human Right to a Green Future: Environmental Rights and
Intergenerational Justice_. H-Human-Rights, H-Net Reviews. December,
2009.
URL: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=25288

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.


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