Health Rights Impacts by Agrochemical Business: Legally Challenging the “Myth of Safe Use”
Author(s) -
Carolijn Terwindt,
Shaelyn Gambino Morrison,
Christian Schliemann
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
utrecht journal of international and european law
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2053-5341
DOI - 10.5334/ujiel.460
Subject(s) - agrochemical , business , damages , natural resource economics , environmental degradation , economics , agriculture , law , political science , ecology , biology
The past decades have seen enormous growth in the agrochemical industry. Its pesticides and fertilisers promise to farmers worldwide an increase in yields and a decrease in labour input. The expansion of the pesticides industry results in tremendous costs to others – in the form of chronic illness, acute injuries, and environmental degradation. Such costs are borne disproportionately by farm and plantation workers in the Global South due to a perilous combination of weak regulation, lack of training and access to information, and meager resources for protective equipment. Agrochemical companies continue to claim that their products are safe when used correctly by farmers and regulated effectively by the state. Advocates have attempted to use litigation as a recourse for challenging the agrochemical industry. Civil litigation against pesticides manufacturers can directly address the injuries suffered from pesticide poisoning, but such lawsuits face a number of challenges and all too often leave workers and farmers without access to an effective remedy. This article explores the potential of complementary litigation which challenges the harmful sales practices of pesticide companies, as well as the precautionary principle, as an alternative to protect pesticide users against hazards.
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