TITLE:
From Environmental Degradation to Social Transformation: Exploring the Role of Eco-Justice in the Struggles of Indigenous Communities
AUTHORS:
Samjhana Rawat Sharma, Manan Sharma
KEYWORDS:
Eco-Justice, Indigenous Rights, Environmental Sociology, Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK), Distributive Justice, Procedural Justice, Recognition Justice, Sustainability
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Social Sciences,
Vol.13 No.5,
May
27,
2025
ABSTRACT: Eco-justice offers a vital framework for examining the intersection of environmental degradation, Indigenous rights, and environmental sociology. Indigenous communities worldwide continue to bear the disproportionate impacts of deforestation, mining, and pollution—harms that not only threaten their physical well-being but also sever deep-rooted cultural, spiritual, and ecological ties to their lands. This paper explores how eco-justice, through its core principles of distributive, procedural, and recognition justice, provides pathways to redress these injustices by advocating for equitable environmental burdens and inclusive decision-making that honors Indigenous sovereignty and knowledge systems. Drawing on case studies from the Amazon, Standing Rock, and the Canadian tar sands, the study highlights how Indigenous movements operationalize eco-justice in their resistance to resource extraction, and in their pursuit of land, cultural preservation, and autonomy. Central to this analysis is the role of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) in promoting sustainability and ecological resilience. The paper further addresses systemic challenges such as structural racism, tokenistic inclusion, and the exacerbating effects of climate change. It concludes with policy recommendations to integrate Indigenous perspectives into environmental governance and calls for future research that deepens the discourse on eco-justice in Indigenous environmental capaigns.