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Environmental inequality and rights of nature among Indigenous Peoples in North America

In: Handbook on Inequality and the Environment

Author

Listed:
  • Julie Schweitzer
  • Olivia M. Fleming
  • Tamara L. Mix

Abstract

Colonial-capitalist systems promote structural environmental inequalities that disproportionately impact Indigenous Peoples and ancestral territories. We examine the role of a Rights of Nature (RoN) framework in articulating responses to environmental inequality through two cases of Indigenous Environmental Justice (IEJ) movements in Canada - the Idle No More (INM) movement and the Wet’suwet’en Nation’s protective actions. Building on previous RoN and IEJ scholarship, we ask: How is the RoN framework employed to address issues of environmental inequality? We find that INM relies on broad references to nature to respond to omnibus Bill C-45, adapting the Nature’s Rights Model, while Wet’suwet’en Nation’s actions align more closely with the Legal Personhood Model in organizing against the Coastal GasLink pipeline and encouraging recognition of Indigenous laws. Altogether enhancing sovereignty claims, we argue that RoN is a framework promoting environmental equity and a tool for resistance to and disruption of settler colonial translations of nature.

Suggested Citation

  • Julie Schweitzer & Olivia M. Fleming & Tamara L. Mix, 2023. "Environmental inequality and rights of nature among Indigenous Peoples in North America," Chapters, in: Michael A. Long & Michael J. Lynch & Paul B. Stretesky (ed.), Handbook on Inequality and the Environment, chapter 9, pages 126-147, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:20464_9
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