Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Record:   Prev Next
Resources
More Information
Bestseller
BestsellerE-book

Title Environmental law and contrasting ideas of nature : a constructivist approach / Keith H. Hirokawa, Albany Law School.

Publication Info. New York : Cambridge University Press, 2014.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (xviii, 343 pages)
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary "Law's ideas of nature appear in different doctrinal and institutional settings, historical periods, and political dialogues. Nature underlies every behavior, contract, or form of wealth, and in this broad sense influences every instance of market transaction or governmental intervention. Recognizing that law has embedded discrete constructions of nature helps in understanding how humans value their relationship with nature. This book offers a scholarly examination of the manner in which nature is constructed through law, both in the "hard" sense of directly regulating human activities that impact nature, and in the "soft" manner in which law's ideas of nature influence and are influenced by behaviors, values, and priorities. Traditional accounts of the intersection between law and nature generally focus on environmental laws that protect wilderness. This book will build on the constructivist observation that when considered as a culturally contingent concept, "nature" is a self-perpetuating and self-reinforcing social creation"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents Introduction: constructing nature through law -- 1. Nature in a constructed world: grounding the constructivist method -- 2. An unnatural divide: how law obscures individual environmental harms -- 3. Defining nature as a common pool resource -- 4. Property constructs and nature's challenge to perpetuity -- 5. Perceiving change and knowing nature: shifting baselines and nature's resiliency -- 6. Animals and law in the American city -- 7. Boundaries of nature and the American city -- 8. Constructing nature the radical way: extreme environmentalism and law -- 9. Wilderness imperatives and untrammeled nature -- 10. Native American values and laws of exclusion -- 11. Challenging what appears "natural": the environmental justice movement's impact on the environmental agenda -- 12. The transformation of water -- 13. Framing watersheds -- 14. The last, last frontier -- Index.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Environmental law -- United States -- Philosophy.
Environmental law.
United States.
Philosophy.
Human ecology.
Human ecology.
Constructivism (Philosophy)
Constructivism (Philosophy)
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Added Author Hirokawa, Keith H., editor.
Other Form: Print version: Environmental law and contrasting ideas of nature 9781107033474 (DLC) 2013045322 (OCoLC)863044260
ISBN 9781139519762 (electronic book)
113951976X (electronic book)
9781316003985 (electronic book)
1316003981 (electronic book)
9781316006245
1316006247
9781316008485
1316008487
9781107033474
1107033470
9781316507575 (paperback)