The Environmental Rights Review (ERR) is an open-access, online journal hosted by the Global Network for Human Rights and the Environment.
The ERR provides opportunities for scholars and practitioners to write and engage with cutting-edge research on the urgent topic of environmental rights, where interdisciplinary approaches address practical applications, and where ideas can be presented discursively with opportunities for responses and evolution. The ERR is a forum for engaging, changing, critical discussion of environmental rights seen broadly, encompassing a wide array interconnecting issues and questions.
In establishing The Review, the editorial team had a number of revolutionary aims. We hope to create a journal that is interactive, where ideas can be developed, engaged with, evolve and grow. The Review will be experimental and adventurous, creating opportunities for the publication of new kinds of research, but also for interrogating and reinventing practices of environmental rights publishing. We aim to create a journal that is at the same time a workshop space, where we can revisit and experiment with old ideas and practices, and develop new approaches and methods.
One of the key aims of the Review is to address the lack of scholarly space and attention that is sometimes given to Global South, Indigenous, LGBTQQIP2SAA and junior scholars in environmental rights publishing and to ensure greater access to environmental rights scholarship. The Review is entirely free and its editors are committed to finding new and innovative ways to ensure accessibility, especially for those without easy access to formal academic resources. While the first two issues will be published in English, in time the Review aims to develop the necessary infrastructure to publish in a range of languages.
The Review will officially launch in Spring 2023 and we are delighted to invite contributions for the Review’s inaugural issue.
This first issue will focus on the growing recognition of the right to a healthy environment at the international level. In October 2021, the Human Rights Council adopted a resolution recognizing the right to a healthy environment. The United Nations General Assembly was then invited to consider the matter. Contributions that explore the process, significance or meaning of international recognition are invited, as well as pieces that reflect on the national influence of the constitutional right to a healthy environment to international recognition or its meaning for national implementation.