Discussion: Can forests have rights?
The GHL seminar series continues on Thursday, April 30th with a Panel Discussion bringing together Matthias Kramm, Jenny García Ruales, Alejandro Mora Motta, Clément Roux and Rosario Figari Layús for a conversation on: Can forests have rights? Forests, indigenous meanings, and the sociocultural implications of the “rights of nature”.
The idea of the ‘rights of nature’ brings together notions of how humans and nature interrelate and of how to operationalise these relations within institutions and state structures. This Panel Discussion engages provocative sociopolitical and cultural elements, including what happens when forests are granted rights, ranging from posthuman Constitutionalism, legal personhood, indigenous rights and law, activism and engaged research, and environmental peace. The discussion will focus on cases in Latin America and their potential application in Germany.
The idea of the ‘rights of nature’ brings together notions of how humans and nature interrelate and of how to operationalise these relations within institutions and state structures. This Panel Discussion engages provocative sociopolitical and cultural elements, including what happens when forests are granted rights, ranging from posthuman Constitutionalism, legal personhood, indigenous rights and law, activism and engaged research, and environmental peace. The discussion will focus on cases in Latin America and their potential application in Germany.
Time
Thursday, 30.04.26 - 04:00 PM
Topic
Rechte der Natur
Speaker
Matthias Kramm, Jenny García Ruales, Alejandro Mora Motta, Clément Roux, Rosario Figari Layús
Target groups
All interested
Location
Global Heritage Lab / P26, Bonn und Zoom
Reservation
not required
Registration/Ticket
Additional Information
Organizer
Bonn Center for Reconciliation Studies, Global Heritage Lab, TRA Present & Pasts, Center for Developement Research
Contact