The article discusses the concept of nature objects as subjects of law as a manifestation of the shift in the legal paradigm in environmental regulation. The subject of the study is the legal status of natural objects in contemporary law. The author examines in detail such aspects of the topic as the transition from the traditional understanding of nature solely as an object of protection and use to its recognition as a subject of law. Special attention is paid to the philosophical and legal foundations of this paradigm shift. The author analyzes the limits of anthropocentric approaches in environmental and private law, as well as the possibilities of endowing nature with its own legal interests. The paper reveals the challenges of protecting nature in the context of an ecological crisis, when traditional mechanisms prove to be insufficiently effective. The author studies the impact of recognizing the legal subjectivity of nature on property institutions, contractual relationships, and liability for causing environmental harm. The methodological basis of this scientific work includes dialectical, formal-legal, comparative-legal methods, and legal modeling. The scientific novelty of the work lies in the systematic justification of the possibility of adapting the concept of nature's rights to the Russian legal order. The philosophical and legal foundation of the new paradigm is defined through the critique of anthropocentrism and engagement with theories of legal subjectivity. The author demonstrates that the lack of autonomous will of a natural object does not impede its legal subjectivity when an effective representation mechanism is in place. The conclusions of the article indicate the need for a phased introduction of the new model. In the first stage, it is proposed to recognize the status of a legal subject for certain unique ecosystems. In subsequent stages, the development of restorative liability and the expansion of the procedural legitimization of representatives of nature are suggested. The author emphasizes that this paradigm strengthens the protection of nature as an independent value, restructures the limits of freedom of contract and property, and enhances the restorative nature of legal liability.
Irina Vladimirovna Semenova (Thu,) studied this question.