Big Picture Science: The Rights of Rivers
Healthy rivers
and riparian ecosystems are teaming with life, but should rivers themselves be
considered alive? The question is central to the growing rights-of-nature
movement that claims that ecosystems and entities, like rivers, have legal
rights. After Ecuador enshrined the rights of nature in its constitution,
lawyers employed the new personhood status to stop mining companies from
clearing a section of the Los Cedros River and its surrounding biodiverse cloud
forest. Granting rivers moral standing comes as over-damming, pollution, and
climate change have put them in crisis globally. Writer Robert Macfarlane
explores how seeing rivers as living beings rather than just resources – a
change he calls “a great act of moral imagination” – could help save our
watersheds and rivers, upon which all life depends.
Guest:
- Robert Macfarlane – Writer and Professor of Literature and Environmental Humanities at the University of Cambridge, and author of “Is a River Alive?”
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