113th ACSA Annual Meeting Proceedings, Repair

Y3K: On Distant Keys

Annual Meeting Proceedings

Author(s): Sandy Litchfield

In the face of escalating environmental degradation, the Rights of Nature movement has emerged as a revolutionary paradigm for Repair. The Rights of Nature (RoN) posits that nature, in all its forms, possesses intrinsic rights.2 This framework has gained traction through various legal initiatives, such as Ecuador’s 2008 Constitution, which recognizes the rights of Pachamama (Mother Earth),3 and local ordinances in the United States that afford legal personhood to rivers and forests. Advocates argue that granting legal rights to nature not only protects ecosystems but also acknowledges their vital role in sustaining human life. The RoN movement is a response to the anthropocentric worldview that has historically dominated environmental policy, where nature is viewed as a mere resource for human exploitation. RoN advocates challenge this notion by asserting that ecosystems have an inherent right to exist, flourish, and evolve, regardless of their utility to humans. This shift in perspective encourages a more holistic approach to environmental governance, one that recognizes the interdependence of all living entities. At the heart of the RoN movement lies the notion of the sentience of place. This concept suggests that ecosystems and landscapes possess their own forms of awareness and life. To theorize the sentience of place is to acknowledge that natural environments are not passive backdrops to human activity but active participants in the web of life. As this socio-political shift takes place, the next generation of architects and designers yearn for narratives—both new and old—that animate nature and highlight our relationality. This paper gives a brief overview of a multi-year transdisciplinary research project called On Distant Keys (ODK).

https://doi.org/10.35483/ACSA.AM.113.26

 

Volume Editors
Sara Jensen Carr & Rubén García Rubio

ISBN
978-1-944214-48-7