Using ‘rights of nature’ to correct environmental wrongs

Using ‘rights of nature’ to correct environmental wrongs

Killer whales swim in tandem in open waters. (NOAA image)

Tired of constantly battling to protect nature, Abi Ludwig, cofounder of the Olympia group Rights of Nature Initiative (RONI) said they’re “going on the offense.”

“We’re at that point where nature has to fight back and we’re ready to take that on from the community level,” said Rachel Kurtz, president and cofounder of RONI.

Kurtz and Ludwig are part of a growing movement to establish rights for nature to exist and thrive.

The idea has picked up support around the state where local governments including Jefferson County, San Juan County and the cities of Burien, Port Townsend and Gig Harbor have issued proclamations recognizing the Southern Resident killer whale population’s right to exist, thrive and flourish. A resolution to acknowledge the rights of Southern Resident orca whales is on the July 11 Whatcom County Council agenda.

Read the article at Using ‘rights of nature’ to correct environmental wrongs, by Clifford Heberden, Salish Current, July 7, 2023.

Share this

Facebook
LinkedIn
X
WhatsApp
Reddit
Threads
Email
Print

More news and updates

Rivers Have Rights: What a New UK Parliamentary Briefing Means for the Global Movement

A new research briefing from the UK House of Commons examines the growing global and domestic movement to grant rivers legal standing. From New Zealand's

A River Deserves More: The Push to Recognize the Roaring Fork’s Rights

An Aspen activist is asking a simple but radical question: what if the Roaring Fork River had legal rights of its own? As Colorado communities

Alderville First Nation Recognizes Rice Lake as Ontario’s First Legal-Person Water Body

On November 17, 2025, Alderville First Nation recognized Rice Lake as a legal person, making it the first water body in Ontario to receive that