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Time and Environmental Law
Telling Nature's Time

Through the lens of time, the book critiques environmental law and recommends ways to enable it to respond to nature's time scales.

Benjamin J. Richardson (Author)

9781107191242, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 3 August 2017

434 pages
23.5 x 15.6 x 2.6 cm, 0.74 kg

Disciplined by industrial clock time, modern life distances people from nature's biorhythms such as its ecological, evolutionary, and climatic processes. The law is complicit in numerous ways. It compresses time through 'fast-track' legislation and accelerated resource exploitation. It suffers from temporal inertia, such as 'grandfathering' existing activities that limits the law's responsiveness to changing circumstances. Insouciance about past ecological damage, and neglect of its restoration, are equally serious temporal flaws: we cannot live sustainably while Earth remains degraded and unrepaired. Applying international and interdisciplinary perspectives on these issues, Time and Environmental Law explores how to align law with the ecological 'timescape' and enable humankind to 'tell nature's time'. Lending insight into environmental behaviour and impacts, this book pioneers a new understanding of environmental law for all societies, and makes recommendations for its reform. Minding nature, not the clock, requires regenerating Earth, adapting to its changes, and living more slowly.

1. It's time
2. Temporalities of change
3. The ever-present now
4. Rear vision
5. Rallentare
6. Telling the time.

Subject Areas: Social impact of environmental issues [RNT], Pollution & threats to the environment [RNP], Conservation of the environment [RNK], International law [LB], Law & society [LAQ], Jurisprudence & general issues [LA]

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