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Paperback

Forthcoming
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English
Polity Press
28 May 2025
Series: Theory Redux
This is a book about justice, but not as we know it. Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos argues that justice is always hydrojustice – that is, always defined in relation to water, the element that constitutes and unites all bodies, human and nonhuman. Hence justice is not an ideal state reached through merely human procedures (legal, political, economic, etc.) but also a planetary one, always conjoined with the element of water that both constitutes and transcends the boundaries of the human. In short, hydrojustice is the just confluence of all bodies, human and nonhuman.

For the first time, this book brings questions of justice into line with the current literature on water. Up to now, justice has been understood as an anthropocentric affair, with most existing theories accepting and reinforcing the division between human and nonhuman. This book builds on feminism, ecology, posthumanism and the current Blue Turn in the humanities and social sciences, and puts questions of justice at their core.

What the book proposes, however, is not simply an ecological concept of justice. Rather, through examples taken from current affairs, science and the art world, it attempts a radical recalibration of what justice is. The book argues that hydrojustice is already here, part of our planetary condition, but it requires unearthing, in the double sense of revealing what is hidden and allowing earth to cede priority to the aquatic.
By:  
Imprint:   Polity Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
ISBN:   9781509561643
ISBN 10:   1509561641
Series:   Theory Redux
Pages:   140
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
1.   Hydra 2.   Be Water 3.   Water in Water 4.   Water Becomes Difference 5.   Wavewriting

Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos is Professor of Law & Theory at the University of Westminster, artist, and fiction author.

Reviews for Hydrojustice

""Hydrojustice is a poetic weave of water, life and legal theory. More than a political treatise, it is a timely manifesto for how to make a shared home in a world of constant fluctuation."" Elizabeth R. Johnson ""This is an outstanding work – its vivacious and voracious style blends poetics, autobiography, legal theory and philosophy of justice into a stand-out text proposing a wholly new jurisprudential method."" Peter Goodrich, Cardozo School of Law


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