Jus Pro Homine, Natura et Animalis: Dignifying the Right to Life of Arctic Indigenous Peoples

Indigenous theorists have developed the multi-spatio-temporal accounts of relationality among humans, natures, and animals. In the context of the Arctic, a holistic approach that integrates the indigenous peoples, frozen water, and polar animals is advocated to ensure identity, spirituality, and hyd...

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Published in:The Yearbook of Polar Law Online
Main Author: Negishi, Yota
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Brill 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22116427_014010003
https://brill.com/view/journals/yplo/14/1/article-p25_3.xml
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spelling crbrillap:10.1163/22116427_014010003 2023-07-02T03:31:00+02:00 Jus Pro Homine, Natura et Animalis: Dignifying the Right to Life of Arctic Indigenous Peoples Negishi, Yota 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22116427_014010003 https://brill.com/view/journals/yplo/14/1/article-p25_3.xml https://brill.com/downloadpdf/journals/yplo/14/1/article-p25_3.xml unknown Brill The Yearbook of Polar Law Online volume 14, issue 1, page 25-44 ISSN 2211-6427 General Medicine journal-article 2023 crbrillap https://doi.org/10.1163/22116427_014010003 2023-06-09T14:45:31Z Indigenous theorists have developed the multi-spatio-temporal accounts of relationality among humans, natures, and animals. In the context of the Arctic, a holistic approach that integrates the indigenous peoples, frozen water, and polar animals is advocated to ensure identity, spirituality, and hydrosocial or cryosocial relations. Such an ontological approach gains importance as the life-threatening phenomenon of climate change is increasingly affecting every aspect of the relationality, happening faster in the Arctic than anywhere on the planet. The adverse effects of climate change on the lives of Arctic indigenous peoples living together with natures and animals pressure us to reconceptualize the meaning of life in constitutional and international law. This paper examines the recent trend to extend the right to life from physical existence to decent existence of indigenous peoples, natures, and animals. It particularly analyses the climate litigations filed by Arctic indigenous peoples, in which they tailor their legal arguments in line with the concept of a dignified life. The author argues that the ontological right to life with dignity not only remedies the vulnerable positions of Arctic indigenous peoples but also corroborates the resilience of their hydrosocial or cryosocial relations with natures and animals. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Climate change Yearbook of Polar Law Brill (via Crossref) Arctic The Yearbook of Polar Law Online 14 1 25 44
institution Open Polar
collection Brill (via Crossref)
op_collection_id crbrillap
language unknown
topic General Medicine
spellingShingle General Medicine
Negishi, Yota
Jus Pro Homine, Natura et Animalis: Dignifying the Right to Life of Arctic Indigenous Peoples
topic_facet General Medicine
description Indigenous theorists have developed the multi-spatio-temporal accounts of relationality among humans, natures, and animals. In the context of the Arctic, a holistic approach that integrates the indigenous peoples, frozen water, and polar animals is advocated to ensure identity, spirituality, and hydrosocial or cryosocial relations. Such an ontological approach gains importance as the life-threatening phenomenon of climate change is increasingly affecting every aspect of the relationality, happening faster in the Arctic than anywhere on the planet. The adverse effects of climate change on the lives of Arctic indigenous peoples living together with natures and animals pressure us to reconceptualize the meaning of life in constitutional and international law. This paper examines the recent trend to extend the right to life from physical existence to decent existence of indigenous peoples, natures, and animals. It particularly analyses the climate litigations filed by Arctic indigenous peoples, in which they tailor their legal arguments in line with the concept of a dignified life. The author argues that the ontological right to life with dignity not only remedies the vulnerable positions of Arctic indigenous peoples but also corroborates the resilience of their hydrosocial or cryosocial relations with natures and animals.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Negishi, Yota
author_facet Negishi, Yota
author_sort Negishi, Yota
title Jus Pro Homine, Natura et Animalis: Dignifying the Right to Life of Arctic Indigenous Peoples
title_short Jus Pro Homine, Natura et Animalis: Dignifying the Right to Life of Arctic Indigenous Peoples
title_full Jus Pro Homine, Natura et Animalis: Dignifying the Right to Life of Arctic Indigenous Peoples
title_fullStr Jus Pro Homine, Natura et Animalis: Dignifying the Right to Life of Arctic Indigenous Peoples
title_full_unstemmed Jus Pro Homine, Natura et Animalis: Dignifying the Right to Life of Arctic Indigenous Peoples
title_sort jus pro homine, natura et animalis: dignifying the right to life of arctic indigenous peoples
publisher Brill
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22116427_014010003
https://brill.com/view/journals/yplo/14/1/article-p25_3.xml
https://brill.com/downloadpdf/journals/yplo/14/1/article-p25_3.xml
geographic Arctic
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Climate change
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volume 14, issue 1, page 25-44
ISSN 2211-6427
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1163/22116427_014010003
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