Environment – Page 8

unConventional Refugees

By Catherine Pelling. This article is part of our August theme, which focuses on the environment and human rights. Read more articles on this theme. Thus far the international community has focused primarily on the scientific aspects of climate change, with the aim of understanding the processes at play and mitigating the impact of human activity. Yet […]

Human rights and environmental rights – making the connection

By Cecilia Riebl. This article is part of our August theme, which focuses on the environment and human rights. Read more articles on this theme. The link between human rights and environmental rights is gaining recognition in Australia and internationally. For example, one of our “inalienable” rights under the International Covenant on Civil and Political […]

The Future of Rio+20

By Chris Wright. This article is part of our August theme, which focuses on the environment and human rights. Read more articles on this theme. For two weeks in June 2012, the world’s view was keenly fixed the “biggest UN event ever”, now known as the Rio+20 Earth Summit. Or, at least that’s what I thought at […]

Editorial: The Environment and Human Rights

Right Now’s August 2012 content is dedicated to exploring the theme of the Environment and Human Rights. We start with two different perspectives on their relationship. Bridget Lewis explains the usefulness and international development of a human right to an environment of a particular quality. In contrast, Peter Burdon proposes a more fundamental turn towards […]

Green Resources Sign

Foreign Investment: Failing People and the Environment

By Dr Kristen Lyons. This article is part of our August theme, which focuses on the environment and human rights. Read more articles on this theme. One of Australia’s greatest contemporary singer-songwriters David Bridie, from the much loved band My Friend the Chocolate Cake, penned what has become one of my favourite songs, “I’ve Got a […]

This land is not nowhere; these people are not no-one

By Scott Ludlam This article is part of our August theme, which focuses on the environment and human rights. Read more articles on this theme. The government is attempting to force a nuclear waste facility on to Muckaty Station, a cattle station 120 kilometres from Tennant Creek in the Northern Territory, in direct violation of the commitments […]

Environmental Protection and the Limits of Rights Talk

By Peter Burdon. This article is part of our August theme, which focuses on the environment and human rights. Read more articles on this theme. There is a long history in environmental studies of locating and developing methods to combat the “root causes” of the current environmental crisis. Canadian philosopher John Livingston explains this approach, noting: “Oil […]

The Right to a Good Environment

By Bridget Lewis. This article is part of our August theme, which focuses on the environment and human rights. Read more articles on this theme. The idea of a human right to an environment of a particular quality has gained traction over recent years with academics and NGOs alike.  It has been employed to bolster demands for […]

Jessie Boylan – Operation Buffalo

  Between 1952 and 1963 the British Government performed nuclear weapons tests at Maralinga and Emu Field in South Australia and Monte Bello Islands off the coast of Western Australia. A total of twelve major nuclear tests were performed, and up to 700 minor ‘dirty’ trials were also conducted. Many Aboriginal people and nuclear veterans […]

Community consultation on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights

29 July 2011 This week, the ACT Attorney-General, Mr Simon Corbell, launched community consultation and called for submissions on the question of whether the protection of economic, social and cultural rights (ESCR) should be included in the Human Rights Act 2004 (ACT). The consultation process forms part of the ACT government’s response to the research […]