Yoongoorrookoo

IF 1.3 Q1 LAW
Alessandro Pelizzon, Anne Poelina, Afshin Akhtar-Khavari, Cristy Clark, Sarah Laborde, Elizabeth Macpherson, K. O’Bryan, Erin O’Donnell, J. Page
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

ABSTRACT Since the momentous release of the Montecristi Constitution of Ecuador in 2008, which recognised Nature, or Pacha Mama, as a subject of rights, the rights of Nature movement across the world has gained exponential momentum, with numerous jurisdictions worldwide now recognising some form of legal subjectivity vested upon Nature. In particular, since 2017, river personhood has dominated news headlines around the world as one of the most recognisable forms of Nature’s novel subjectivity. The emergence of legal personhood for nature, however, has been far from uncontroversial, and numerous critiques have been advanced against the use of such a legal category – traditionally applied to humans and their abstract creations (such as States and corporations) – to the natural world, resulting in numerous calls for an alternative category of legal personhood (one that some rights of Nature advocates have termed an ‘environmental person’). Against the backdrop of this emerging debate, this paper acknowledges the work undertaken by the Martuwarra Fitzroy River Council (Martuwarra Council), which was established in 2018 in the Kimberley region of Western Australia by six independent Indigenous nations to preserve, promote and protect their ancestral River from ongoing destructive ‘development’. The Council believes it is time to recognise the pre-existing and continuing legal authority of Indigenous law, or ‘First Law’, in relation to the River, in order to preserve its integrity through a process of legal decolonisation. First Law differs markedly from its colonial counterpart, as its principles are not articulated in terms of rules, policies and procedures, but rather through stories. This paper, therefore, begins with a dialogical translation of one First Law story relating to Yoongoorrookoo, the ancestral serpent being, to create a semantic bridge between two apparently distant legal worldviews. A dialogical comparative analysis is then followed to posit and explore the concept of an ‘ancestral person’ as a novel comparative tool that may be able not only to capture the idea of Nature as a legal subject, but also complex Indigenous worldviews that see Nature – in this case instantiated in the Martuwarra – as an ancestral being enmeshed in a relationship of interdependence and guardianship between the human and the nonhuman world. To instantiate and embody such relationships, the paper directly, and somewhat provocatively, acknowledges the River itself, the Martuwarra RiverOfLife, as the primary participant in such dialogue, an embodied non-human co-author who began a conversation then left to human writers to continue.
Yoongoorrookoo
自2008年《厄瓜多尔蒙特克里斯蒂宪法》(Montecristi Constitution of Ecuador,简称Pacha Mama)颁布以来,全球范围内的自然权利运动获得了指数级的发展势头,世界各地的许多司法管辖区现在都承认某种形式的法律主体性赋予了自然。特别是,自2017年以来,河流人格作为大自然新颖主体性的最可识别形式之一,占据了世界各地的新闻头条。然而,自然法律人格的出现远非没有争议,许多批评已经提出反对使用这种法律类别-传统上适用于人类及其抽象创造(如国家和公司)-对自然界,导致许多人呼吁另一种法律人格类别(一些自然权利倡导者称之为“环境人”)。在这一新兴辩论的背景下,本文承认马图瓦拉菲茨罗伊河理事会(马图瓦拉理事会)所做的工作,该理事会于2018年由六个独立的土著民族在西澳大利亚金伯利地区成立,旨在保护、促进和保护其祖先的河流免受持续的破坏性“开发”。理事会认为,现在是时候承认与河流有关的土著法律或“第一法律”的现有和持续的法律权威,以便通过法律非殖民化进程保持其完整性。《第一定律》与殖民时期的《第一定律》明显不同,因为它的原则不是用规则、政策和程序来表达的,而是通过故事来表达的。因此,本文从一个关于Yoongoorrookoo(蛇的祖先)的第一定律故事的对话翻译开始,在两种明显遥远的法律世界观之间建立一个语义桥梁。然后进行对话比较分析,假设和探索“祖先人”的概念,作为一种新的比较工具,它不仅可以捕捉到自然作为法律主体的概念,而且还可以捕捉到复杂的土著世界观,即将自然视为人类和非人类世界之间相互依存和监护关系的祖先-在这种情况下,Martuwarra的例子就是如此。为了实例化和体现这种关系,这篇论文直接地,有点挑衅地承认,这条河本身,即马图瓦拉生命之河,是这种对话的主要参与者,是一个化身的非人类合作者,他开始了一场对话,然后留给人类作家继续。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
8.30%
发文量
25
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