The Caribbean region faces particular environmental challenges as a result of colonial land use, pressures from tourism and globalisation, as well as climate change. No less affected are its heritage resources, which include natural and cultural elements crucial to economic survival and local identity. This research explores the relationship between land, law and heritage in order to better understand the regulatory failures that undermine heritage protection in the English-speaking Caribbean. Using a spatial justice lens to examine the legal framework of eight islands in the Lesser Antilles, the analysis posits that domestic heritage laws are ineffective, because they ignore the relevance of local places or landscapes to the formation of heritage. Relying instead on ideas of land as abstract property rights, heritage is presented as a mere visual embellishment that can deteriorate into an unsightly and costly burden for the landowner or State, rather than the outcome of dynamic and locally unique interactions between people and place. While domestic laws continue to classify heritage as objects, sites and buildings with fixed aesthetic value, international law has adopted a more progressive stance, placing community relationships with landscape at the heart of heritage protection strategies. Empowering communities to contest unsustainable treatment of the landscape can potentially lead to the recognition of the value of landscape integrity to sustainable heritage, and influence change at the national level. Integrating landscape considerations into the legal framework can make law more responsive to the nuances and limits of the local cultural and natural environment. These dynamic landscape processes are also relevant to debates concerning climate change, ecosystem degradation, access to public spaces and environmental human rights. As such, this work should be of interest to legal practitioners in heritage and environmental law, planners, geographers and other academia exploring socio-legal approaches to sustainable development.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
Publication Date: 10 Oct 2022
Publisher: Sidestone Press
Publication City/Country: Netherlands
Language: English
ISBN13: 9789464280401
About Amanda Byer
Amanda Byer is an environmental lawyer from the Caribbean. She holds a PhD in Cultural Heritage Law from Leiden University the Netherlands and an LLM in Environmental Law from University College London. Amandas research interests lie in exploring the relationship between cultural interpretations of land and effective environmental protection in the law. In her doctoral research she conducted a legal geographical analysis of heritage planning and environmental laws in the English-speaking Lesser Antilles. The research considered the relevance of community bonds with land to heritage formation the consequences of ignoring these relationships in domestic law and the potential for international law via procedural environmental rights (PER) to challenge and remedy the shortcomings of these traditional approaches to heritage protection. Following completion of her PhD Amanda was awarded a postdoctoral fellowship at New York University School of Law during which she explored the role of PER in the Escazú Agreement on Access to Information Public Participation and Justice in Environmental Matters in Latin America and the Caribbean. Amanda is currently a postdoctoral researcher in the Property InJustice project at University College Dublin Sutherland School of Law.