Biodiversity, health science, and the human right to a healthy environment

Liz Willetts*, Lora Fleming, Elisa Morgera

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Planetary health agendas require a stronger human rights focus. Both public health and the human right to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment depend on biodiversity, ecosystems, and a healthy biosphere. Targeted transdisciplinary health research, action, and communication on biodiversity-health linkages can clarify and reinforce the human rights obligations of public authorities whose decisions may negatively affect the environment. However, our observations across law, policy, science, and advocacy show that there is a void of transdisciplinary guidance on how to apply the human right to the environment to make broader impacts on policy and law.

We introduce a Biodiversity-Health Roadmap to the UN Framework Principles on Human Rights and the Environment. This is only a starting point to co-develop and mobilize knowledge and policy-driven research and action agendas across the health-environment nexus and among for a science, policy, and law professionals. In this paper, we invite knowledge co-development among health and environmental sciences, environmental law, human rights and policy advisors to steer, mobilize, and focus the health-environment nexus on human rights to support more effective and coherent public decisions.
Original languageEnglish
JournalThe Lancet - Planetary Health
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 3 Apr 2025

Keywords

  • biodiversity and health
  • oceans and human health
  • biodiversity and human rights
  • environmental law
  • planetary health
  • science policy
  • transdisciplinary
  • epidemiology
  • public health
  • global health

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