Livelihood Environmentalism and Judicial Activism: A Critical Review of Sri Lankan Experience
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Date
2021
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Publisher
Uva Wellassa University of Sri Lanka
Abstract
Environmentalism refers to the methods and tools used for the protection of the environment from
the adverse effects caused upon it by the humankind. While the concern is common, the
approaches utilized under environmentalism has differed across the rich and the poor where the
poor have advocated for a livelihood approach for the protection of environment where the
environment protection is advocated as a means of protecting their livelihood. When one considers
this situation from a Sri Lankan perspective, the livelihood approach has been utilized and is
responsible for invoking the judicial activism of the courts in acting as a protector of the
environment through its adjudication process. Using a qualitative method by employing the
doctrinal approach, this article looks at the intersection of the livelihood approach and the judicial
activism in advancing a right to a clean and healthy environment. The results have shown that, the
courts have played an active role when it has been called to adjudicate on environmental matters
that involves a livelihood aspect and this has led the judiciary to take a conscious effort in getting
itself involved in the protection and preservation of the environment in the absence of
Constitutional provisions which specifically grants a justiciable right to a clean and healthy
environment. The judiciary has been bold enough to declare that a meaningful interpretation of
Article 12(1) of the Constitution should include a right to a clean and healthy environment.
However, it is concluded that, while the livelihood approach has made a significant impact on the
judicial law making in the country when it comes to advocating for a right to a clean and healthy
environment, having a specific right to a clean and healthy environment under the fundamental
rights chapter of the Constitution itself must be the final endeavour in helping those who to
vindicate their right to a clean and healthy environment through fundamental right adjudication.
Keywords: Livelihood Environmentalism; Judicial Activism; Right to Environment; Sociology
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Keywords
Environmental Science, Social Science, Sociology, Humanities, Social & Library Sciences