სამართალი და მსოფლიო (Mar 2022)

Africa in the Eye of the Storm: Navigating Law and Structural Inequality in Global Environmental Relations

  • Olalekan Moyosore Lalude,
  • Ayoyemi Lawal-Arowolo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.36475/8.1.1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 8 – 26

Abstract

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Environmental racism is a phenomenon defined by an unfair allocation of environmental risks. It is a systematic violation of the right to a safe and healthy environment. Environmental racism takes root in the colonial prioritization of race in the distribution of social and environmental benefits. The environment should not be treated like an infinite garbage can. The economic polarity of the world will always have some people on the receiving end of an ordeal. In contradistinction to the ideal, in Africa, environmental justice is a concept of privilege. The costs of industrialization such as environmental degradation and the generation of toxic waste have brought about imbalances in the environment. These imbalances have caused variant problems, both short term and long term This article discussed environmental racism and what it means for the realization of environmental justice. This article further compared the successes of the Bamako Convention to the Basel Convention in the light of the realities of the dumping of hazardous waste in Africa and the conduct of activities injurious to the environment. It further examined the activities of multinational companies in Africa and how weak regulatory environments aid the impunity of environmental pollution.

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