Law, Restoration and Ontologies for a More Ecologically Complex World!

Dublin Core

Title

Law, Restoration and Ontologies for a More Ecologically Complex World!

Description

Restoration efforts can target very different outcomes. Simply put, restoration is a process, and diverse values and ontological dispositions can shape the why, what and how questions about what people do. Restorative inputs focused on adaptively adding complexity into an ecosystem commits to values that go beyond rehabilitating and just removing threats and harms that are disturbing an ecosystem. Restoring within a landscape to enhance its ecological complexity is a useful goal for adaptive governance, and one which will also enable discussions about how humans and legal and governance institutions can change and respond to managing the environment. Using two scenarios we briefly explore how governance approaches to restoration need ontological dispositions focused on ecological complexity. In particular, we argue in this article that a focus on inputs into ecological complexity creates not only opportunities for overall net gain, but also, and more critically, that it requires legal and governance changes that establish parameters for how the vision will be realised. We explore and briefly discuss four of these institutional challenges to chart further research trajectories for how restorative inputs into ecological complexity can be achieved.

Creator

Boulot, Emille
Akhtar-Khavari, Afshin

Source

The University of Queensland Law Journal; Vol. 39 No. 3 (2020): Special Issue on Ecosystem Services and the Law; 450-473
1839-289X
0083-4041
10.38127/uqlj.v39i3

Publisher

The University of Queensland School of Law

Date

2020-12-10

Rights

Copyright (c) 2021 The University of Queensland Law Journal

Relation

Format

application/pdf

Language

eng

Type

info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Peer-reviewed Article

Identifier

Citation

Emille Boulot and Akhtar-Khavari, Afshin, Law, Restoration and Ontologies for a More Ecologically Complex World!, The University of Queensland School of Law, 2020, accessed November 22, 2024, https://igi.indrastra.com/items/show/2655

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