The Power of Constitutional Rights in Resource Conflicts: Water, Oil and Gold
By (Author) Asmaa Khadim
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
10th September 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Environment law
Comparative law
Drought and water supply
344.046
Hardback
250
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
Water is essential to all life and yet never has anthropogenic activity posed a greater risk to our water resources. This book explores legal mechanisms utilized by communities to protect water resources within the context of protracted mining conflicts, focusing on oil sands development in the Canadian boreal forest and gold mining in ecologically sensitive, glacier-rich areas of Argentina. This book highlights the value of constitutional approaches to environmental rights protection in such conflicts. Despite the incorporation of substantive environmental rights into many domestic constitutions, questions remain about the efficacy and functioning of constitutional methods. The case studies in this book provide insight into how community stakeholders pursue environmental rights claims in jurisdictions that differ in their treatment of environmental rights. These case studies demonstrate how constitutional rights can address inadequate participatory processes and increase accountability and transparency in environmental decision-making, thereby significantly improving access to justice and providing a more equitable means of resolving resource conflicts. By taking a contextual approach, this book makes a valuable contribution to the development of theory relating to environmental constitutionalism and its practical implications for the protection of water resources in contentious mining conflicts.
Dr. Asmaa Khadim is a multidisciplinary expert in law, human rights and resource extraction.