The Italian Constitution in the Anthropocene. Tracing The European Tradition of Environmental Constitutionalism
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to provide a comparative framework for the European tradition of solidaristic
environmental constitutionalism, as the backdrop of the recent Italian environmental constitutional
amendment. The paper will firstly present a historical analysis of the different cultural approaches to the
constitutional protection of the environment. Secondly, the contribution will investigate how the methodological
toolbox of comparative law could be employed to identify some prototypes of environmental constitutionalism
(e.g., the European model of ‘instrumental protection’, the North American model of ‘procedural protection’,
the recognition of the legal subjectivity of Nature in Global South constitutions). Finally, this contribution
will briefly review three case studies, in an effort to underline the potential of ex ante (or physiological)
instruments, like deliberative democracy, as well as ex post (or pathological) tools, like climate litigation. The
French Convention citoyenne pour le climat of 2019, the order Neubauer, et al. v. Germany issued by the
German Federal Constitutional Court and, lastly, the Italian environmental constitutional amendment
approved in February 2022, will be examined.
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Comparative Law Review is registered at the Courthouse of Monza (Italy) - Nr. 1988 - May, 10th 2010.
Editors - Prof. Giovanni Marini, Prof. Pier Giuseppe Monateri, Prof. Tommaso Edoardo Frosini, Prof. Salvatore Sica, Prof. Alessandro Somma, Prof. Giuseppe Franco Ferrari, Prof. Massimiliano Granieri.
Direttore responsabile:Alessandro Somma