Chapter 9: Reimagining Ecological Governance Through a Rediscovery of the Commons
in Thought, Law, Action and Rights in an Age of Environmental Crisis, Pp. 251-282, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing, Anna Grear & Evadne Grant eds., 2015
Posted: 16 Dec 2015
Date Written: December 1, 2015
Abstract
One of the most distressing realities of our time is the failure of governance institutions to confront well-documented ecological and social problems with vigour, honesty, and imagination. A kind of political and institutional paralysis is precluding the growth of promising alternatives. In this book review of Chapter 9, we argue that the Commons paradigm, especially when guided by human rights law and policy, can help us imagine and implement a new vision of provisioning and democratic governance. We do not propose an abrupt, revolutionary change, but one that can feasibly evolve within the fragile, deteriorating edifice of existing institutions. The Commons as a discourse and set of ethical social practices offers many attractive features in navigating a transformation in ecological governance. It offers a coherent economic and political critique of existing State/Market institutions, and its history embraces many venerable legal principles that help us both to imagine new forms of law and to develop proactive strategies for effecting change. Perhaps most importantly, the Commons is supported by an actual transnational movement of commoners who are co-creating innovative new provisioning and governance systems that work. It is important to understand that the Commons is not an ideological agenda or an impractical, Utopian vision. It is a useful new/old framework and vocabulary for building a new societal vision and for imagining constructive alternatives to the neoliberal economics and policies that now enclose (commodify and privatise) shared resources at virtually every opportunity, dispossessing communities and degrading our natural environment and public order.
Keywords: environment, environmental law, law-academic, environmental law, human rights, politics and public policy, human rights
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