Dear colleagues,

I hope you are doing well.

I wanted to share a paper recently published in *Sustainability Science*
that may be of interest to those working on sustainability governance,
environmental law, and justice frameworks.

The article offers a critical re-reading of the Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs), tracing how their integrative language centers human progress
while positioning nature as background, resource, or beneficiary. It offers
a critical, interpretive re-reading of three core goals: SDG 1 (No
Poverty), SDG 15 (Life on Land), and SDG 16 (Peace, Justice, and Strong
Institutions), and then situates them alongside SDG 17 (Partnerships for
the Goals) to explore what a genuinely ecocentric architecture might look
like.

Rather than treating interspecies justice or Indigenous ontologies as
normative add-ons, the paper takes them as structuring principles. From
that starting point, it identifies a set of shifts that would be required
to move from a human-centered to a relational model of governance. These
include legal accountability for ecological harm, multispecies approaches
to monitoring, epistemic pluralism, and institutional forms oriented around
reciprocity and shared responsibility. One of the more provocative moves is
the reframing of “partnership” away from a managerial device toward a moral
and ecological relation.

The broader aim is to open space for thinking about sustainability
governance in ways that do not reproduce human exceptionalism, and to
consider what it would mean to treat ecosystems and species as participants
in, rather than objects of, governance.

If you’re interested, the paper is available open access here:
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11625-026-01802-2.

I would be very interested to hear your thoughts, particularly from those
engaging with SDG reform, rights of Nature, or multispecies justice in
practice.

Regards,
Dr Stacy-ann Robinson
Emory University

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