Publication | Open Access
Indigenous environmental justice and sustainability
272
Citations
42
References
2020
Year
Environmental LawNative Environmental SovereigntyDistinct FormulationLawIndigenous PeopleIndigenous MovementInternational Environmental LawSocial SciencesPolitical EcologyIndigenous StudyIndigenous GovernanceIndigenous CulturesTraditional Ecological KnowledgeEnvironmental PoliticsEnvironmental JusticeIndigenous RightsDistinct Iej FormulationIndigenous Environmental JusticeClimate JusticeIndigenous IdentityIndigenous Knowledge SystemsIndigenous StudiesAnthropology
Current global, national, and local governance systems fail Indigenous peoples and all life, and Indigenous peoples have long diagnosed the planetary ecological crisis through their environmental declarations. The study proposes a distinct Indigenous environmental justice formulation to address ecological crisis and Indigenous‑specific violence, grounding it in Indigenous philosophies, ontologies, and epistemologies, and challenging the legitimacy of global and nation‑state legal mechanisms. The proposed IEJ formulation is grounded in Indigenous philosophies, ontologies, and epistemologies, and it questions the legitimacy of global and nation‑state political and legal mechanisms.
A distinct formulation of Indigenous environmental justice (IEJ) is required in order to address the challenges of the ecological crisis as well the various forms of violence and injustices experienced specifically by Indigenous peoples. A distinct IEJ formulation must ground its foundations in Indigenous philosophies, ontologies, and epistemologies in order to reflect Indigenous conceptions of what constitutes justice. This approach calls into question the legitimacy and applicability of global and nationstate political and legal mechanisms, as these same states and international governing bodies continue to fail Indigenous peoples around the world. Not only do current global, national and local systems of governance and law fail Indigenous peoples, they fail all life. Indigenous peoples over the decades have presented a distinct diagnosis of the planetary ecological crisis evidenced in the observations shared as part of Indigenous environmental declarations.
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