
David R. Boyd
Author of The Rights of Nature: A Legal Revolution That Could Save the World
About the Author
David R. Boyd is a leading Canadian expert in environmental law and policy and an adjunct professor in the School of Resource and Environmental Management at Simon Fraser University. An award-winning author, Boyd has written several books, including The Optimistic Environmentalist: Progressing show more Towards a Greener Future; The Environmental Rights Revolution: A Global Study of Constitutions, Human Rights, and the Environment; The Right to a Healthy Environment: Revitalizing Canada's Constitution: For more Information visit www.davidrichboyd.com show less
Works by David R. Boyd
Unnatural Law: Rethinking Canadian Environmental Law and Policy (Law and Society Series) (2003) 27 copies
Dodging the Toxic Bullet: How to Protect Yourself from Everyday Environmental Health Hazards (2010) 24 copies
The Environmental Rights Revolution: A Global Study of Constitutions, Human Rights, and the Environment (Law and Society) (2011) 11 copies
Cleaner, greener, healthier : a prescription for stronger Canadian environmental laws and policies (2015) 5 copies
The Right to a Healthy Environment: Revitalizing Canada's Constitution (Law and Society) (2012) 5 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Boyd, David Richard
- Birthdate
- 1964
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- lawyer
- Short biography
- David R. Boyd is an environmental lawyer, professor, and advocate for recognition of the right to live in a healthy environment. Boyd is the award-winning author of seven books and more than 100 articles and currently co-chairs Vancouver's Greenest City initiative with Mayor Gregor Robertson.
- Nationality
- Canada
- Places of residence
- Pender Island, British Columbia, Canada
- Associated Place (for map)
- British Columbia, Canada
Members
Reviews
Michael McDougall, a physician with MÊdecins Sans Frontières in the Congo, was exasperated at the lack of aid, water, food and medicine for his patients. After a traumatic experience where one colleague was killed and another seriously injured and raped, he was returned home suffering from PTSD.
Thwarted in finding any way of helping, he decided to take action by putting Perc (used in dry cleaning) in the Seattle water supply, not enough to harm anyone, but as a warning. Based on the email show more alert he sent, the official evaluation of the âterroristâ was amusing in its inaccuracy. Ironically, the way he was treated by US law enforcement when he was picked up in the middle of surgery, was alarmingly similar to the methods of Congolese thugs.
This is a terrific thriller that has excellent characters and is both believable, topical and thought-provoking. Boyd is a lawyer and the courtroom scenes were first-rate. show less
Thwarted in finding any way of helping, he decided to take action by putting Perc (used in dry cleaning) in the Seattle water supply, not enough to harm anyone, but as a warning. Based on the email show more alert he sent, the official evaluation of the âterroristâ was amusing in its inaccuracy. Ironically, the way he was treated by US law enforcement when he was picked up in the middle of surgery, was alarmingly similar to the methods of Congolese thugs.
This is a terrific thriller that has excellent characters and is both believable, topical and thought-provoking. Boyd is a lawyer and the courtroom scenes were first-rate. show less
Rating: 4* of five
The Publisher Says: Yes, the world faces substantial environmental challenges â climate change, pollution, and extinction. But the surprisingly good news is that we have solutions to these problems. In the past 50 years, a remarkable number of environmental problems have been solved, while substantial progress is ongoing on others.
The Optimistic Environmentalist chronicles these remarkable success stories. Endangered species â from bald eagles to gray whales â pulled show more back from the precipice of extinction. Thousands of new parks, protecting billions of hectares of land and water. The salvation of the ozone layer, vital to life on Earth. The exponential growth of renewable energy powered by wind, water, and sun. The race to be the greenest city in the world. Remarkable strides in cleaning up the air we breathe and the water we drink. The banning of dozens of the worldâs most toxic chemicals. A circular economy where waste is a thing of the past. Past successes pave the way for even greater achievements in the future.
Providing a powerful antidote to environmental despair, this book inspires optimism, leading readers to take action and exemplifying how change can happen.
THE PUBLISHER SENT ME THIS ARC. THANK YOU.
My Review: Nine years on, this book hits different. We've just been through a truly horrifying US election, won by the lowest scum ever to win the world's most powerful political office; we can expect bad trouble to follow, on many fronts, soon.
That is going to require clear thinking and focused action. In its turn, that will require us to know where we are. The author presents his facts and draws very positive conclusions based on them.
No one can protect something they do not know the value, and the extent of. Learn! Don't despair...learn, and grown hardened to the messages of nihilism and misery and *shudder* change.
Protect our planet or we all go down together. show less
The Publisher Says: Yes, the world faces substantial environmental challenges â climate change, pollution, and extinction. But the surprisingly good news is that we have solutions to these problems. In the past 50 years, a remarkable number of environmental problems have been solved, while substantial progress is ongoing on others.
The Optimistic Environmentalist chronicles these remarkable success stories. Endangered species â from bald eagles to gray whales â pulled show more back from the precipice of extinction. Thousands of new parks, protecting billions of hectares of land and water. The salvation of the ozone layer, vital to life on Earth. The exponential growth of renewable energy powered by wind, water, and sun. The race to be the greenest city in the world. Remarkable strides in cleaning up the air we breathe and the water we drink. The banning of dozens of the worldâs most toxic chemicals. A circular economy where waste is a thing of the past. Past successes pave the way for even greater achievements in the future.
Providing a powerful antidote to environmental despair, this book inspires optimism, leading readers to take action and exemplifying how change can happen.
THE PUBLISHER SENT ME THIS ARC. THANK YOU.
My Review: Nine years on, this book hits different. We've just been through a truly horrifying US election, won by the lowest scum ever to win the world's most powerful political office; we can expect bad trouble to follow, on many fronts, soon.
That is going to require clear thinking and focused action. In its turn, that will require us to know where we are. The author presents his facts and draws very positive conclusions based on them.
No one can protect something they do not know the value, and the extent of. Learn! Don't despair...learn, and grown hardened to the messages of nihilism and misery and *shudder* change.
Protect our planet or we all go down together. show less
Pender Island, BC writer, David Boyd, adds a well-crafted, riveting thriller to the eco-fiction genre with his novel, Thirst for Justice.
Readers follow the main character, Michael MacDougall, a surgeon, as he slowly sinks into the darkness associated with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder following a harrowing attack on his medical team serving in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Back working at Seattle's Harborview Hospital, he lands on a simple idea that would save countless African show more children's lives. He tirelessly promotes his idea to individuals, corporations, and the government with no luck and no takers.
Frustrated, he takes a step that sets in motion the worst actions of an increasingly non-democratic US government operating under the Patriot Act and the various power-hungry minions jockeying for position within it.
Into this mix, add a government worker with a conscience and two lawyers who care about justice and you have a novel well-worth adding [XBR] to your library of page-turners. show less
Readers follow the main character, Michael MacDougall, a surgeon, as he slowly sinks into the darkness associated with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder following a harrowing attack on his medical team serving in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Back working at Seattle's Harborview Hospital, he lands on a simple idea that would save countless African show more children's lives. He tirelessly promotes his idea to individuals, corporations, and the government with no luck and no takers.
Frustrated, he takes a step that sets in motion the worst actions of an increasingly non-democratic US government operating under the Patriot Act and the various power-hungry minions jockeying for position within it.
Into this mix, add a government worker with a conscience and two lawyers who care about justice and you have a novel well-worth adding [XBR] to your library of page-turners. show less
Reading David R. Boydâs The Rights of Nature in these United States is a bit disassociative. He is writing in an alternative universe where Scott Pruitt is still suing the E.P.A., not running it and we still had a legitimate government that respected the rule of law. However, if we ignore the United States and the crony capitalist kakistocracy in D.C., there is optimism for the environment in changing legal theories and the advancing idea that nature itself has rights.
The Rights of Nature show more begins by exploring how we have learned more about animals in recent years that support the idea that they are sentient and self-aware. You would think anyone in daily contact with animals would know through experience that animals are not just automatons reacting to input, but have personality and character and a self. Still, itâs nice to have science proving it. We also did not need science to tell us they feel pain, but again, if it takes a study to change how we treat animals, then hooray for studies.
Perhaps itâs science fiction and my love of Farscape, but I think that even this is anthropomorphism. After all, itâs entirely possible trees feel pain and have awareness, but in a way we donât recognize because they experience their awareness differently. We recognize the sentience and awareness of animals in the ways animals are like us, limiting our understanding of what awareness can be.
Boyd covers increasing successes of legal cases and theories to protect animals. Suits for lions, tigers, and bears and, of course, the snail darter. A lot of time is spent on the Endangered Species Act because it is one of the rare environmental protections with sharp teeth. From there he moves on to where even more broad-based rights of nature have been recognized. Going to New Zealand where rather than return disputed territory to the Maori, the government adopted the Maori view of the land owning itself, belonging to itself, protected by appointed guardians. This is exciting in advancing the idea that land has rights, but there is a cynical element in me who saw the eager embrace of giving the land to itself instead of to the Maori as a way of evading reparations for atrocities committed against them.
In Ecuador and Bolivia, great aspirational Constitutional protections have been written into law. There is a gap between aspiration and reality as wide as the socio-economic needs of these impoverished countries. This runs us against the common expecation of environmentalists, to save the planet on the backs of developing countries, asking them to develop less, to be poorer, to go without because we have wasted so much.
Reading this seven months into Donald Trumpâs presidency* is almost hallucinatory. Hurricane Harvey is devastating the Texas coastline the same week President* Trump rescinded guidelines for construction to mitigate flood damage. They announced they are not going to get rid of national parks and preserves, just make them smaller and allow resource extraction. This president who did not even win a plurality of the vote is prepared to end this planet with his ignorance. So yes, I am eager for good news.
It is exciting that there is growing acceptance and enthusiasm behind the idea of Nature itself having rights, that a river has a right to not be destroyed. I am all for saving the planet. I donât have children, but I have nieces and nephews and they have children and I want them to have a safe, healthy environment in a world not torn apart by resource wars. On the other hand, I am not comfortable with criticism of developing countries who seek to bring their people out of entrenched poverty when we all know they are not the reason climate is changing.
We cannot be absolutist. The northern hemisphere needs to clean up its act and not expect the southern hemisphere to save us by accepting poverty. Perhaps because most of the efforts to protect the environment are being led in the southern hemisphere, the difference between action and rhetoric (and law) is more pronounced, but I would really like to see less criticism of Correa and Morales for doing less than they aspire and more for the EU, Canada, and the US for not even aspriing to do very much at all.
The Rights of Nature will be published September 5th. I received an advance e-galley for review from ECW Press through Edelweiss.
https://tonstantweaderreviews.wordpress.com/2017/08/29/9781770412392/ show less
The Rights of Nature show more begins by exploring how we have learned more about animals in recent years that support the idea that they are sentient and self-aware. You would think anyone in daily contact with animals would know through experience that animals are not just automatons reacting to input, but have personality and character and a self. Still, itâs nice to have science proving it. We also did not need science to tell us they feel pain, but again, if it takes a study to change how we treat animals, then hooray for studies.
Perhaps itâs science fiction and my love of Farscape, but I think that even this is anthropomorphism. After all, itâs entirely possible trees feel pain and have awareness, but in a way we donât recognize because they experience their awareness differently. We recognize the sentience and awareness of animals in the ways animals are like us, limiting our understanding of what awareness can be.
Boyd covers increasing successes of legal cases and theories to protect animals. Suits for lions, tigers, and bears and, of course, the snail darter. A lot of time is spent on the Endangered Species Act because it is one of the rare environmental protections with sharp teeth. From there he moves on to where even more broad-based rights of nature have been recognized. Going to New Zealand where rather than return disputed territory to the Maori, the government adopted the Maori view of the land owning itself, belonging to itself, protected by appointed guardians. This is exciting in advancing the idea that land has rights, but there is a cynical element in me who saw the eager embrace of giving the land to itself instead of to the Maori as a way of evading reparations for atrocities committed against them.
In Ecuador and Bolivia, great aspirational Constitutional protections have been written into law. There is a gap between aspiration and reality as wide as the socio-economic needs of these impoverished countries. This runs us against the common expecation of environmentalists, to save the planet on the backs of developing countries, asking them to develop less, to be poorer, to go without because we have wasted so much.
Reading this seven months into Donald Trumpâs presidency* is almost hallucinatory. Hurricane Harvey is devastating the Texas coastline the same week President* Trump rescinded guidelines for construction to mitigate flood damage. They announced they are not going to get rid of national parks and preserves, just make them smaller and allow resource extraction. This president who did not even win a plurality of the vote is prepared to end this planet with his ignorance. So yes, I am eager for good news.
It is exciting that there is growing acceptance and enthusiasm behind the idea of Nature itself having rights, that a river has a right to not be destroyed. I am all for saving the planet. I donât have children, but I have nieces and nephews and they have children and I want them to have a safe, healthy environment in a world not torn apart by resource wars. On the other hand, I am not comfortable with criticism of developing countries who seek to bring their people out of entrenched poverty when we all know they are not the reason climate is changing.
We cannot be absolutist. The northern hemisphere needs to clean up its act and not expect the southern hemisphere to save us by accepting poverty. Perhaps because most of the efforts to protect the environment are being led in the southern hemisphere, the difference between action and rhetoric (and law) is more pronounced, but I would really like to see less criticism of Correa and Morales for doing less than they aspire and more for the EU, Canada, and the US for not even aspriing to do very much at all.
The Rights of Nature will be published September 5th. I received an advance e-galley for review from ECW Press through Edelweiss.
https://tonstantweaderreviews.wordpress.com/2017/08/29/9781770412392/ show less
Statistics
- Works
- 15
- Members
- 185
- Popularity
- #117,259
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 38



