The US Constitution Left Out Nature. Green Amendments Could Fix That

November 29, 2025

The US Constitution Left Out Nature. Green Amendments Could Fix That

Democracy

Words by Maya K. van Rossum

Photographs by Silvana Trevale

Styling by Daniela Benaim

Adding Green Amendments in every state could help secure fundamental environmental rights the constitution overlooked.

Across the United States, our state and federal constitutions recognize and protect many cherished rights and freedoms: our right to free speech, to peaceably assemble, to the safety and sanctity of our property, and even to bear arms. But in an oversight of history, these constitutions typically do not recognize the right to drink clean water or breathe clean air, or the right to a safe climate and healthy environment. Instead, these fundamental human rights are entrusted to an imperfect political system in which money, power, and special interests often take precedence over justice and basic human needs—and in which partisan advantage is often more important than facts, science, or human life. 

That’s why I believe it’s time to add a Green Amendment to every state constitution in the country.

Rather than recognize a constitutional entitlement to a clean, safe, and healthy environment, here in the U.S., we protect our environment through a patchwork system of legislation and regulation. These laws and regulations are created by a political system dominated by money, partisanship, and narrow concentrations of social and economic influence that actually benefit (financially or politically) from environmental degradation. The resulting system of environmental protection is fundamentally flawed. 

Under this system, environmental pollution and degradation is something to be managed, moderated, or mitigated after the fact rather than recognized as a harm that can and should be prevented. It is a system that accepts and legalizes environmental pollution and degradation through regulatory reviews and permits. The law also contains many critical gaps in which environmental harms are not addressed until it is too late, or sometimes not addressed at all.

Ares wears Julia Sue Dotson vest, stylist’s own shirt, paper clothesline necklace made by Tova Bach
James wears Babaà jumper and shorts, own boots

(For an example, look no further than PFAS, also known as forever chemicals: a man-made family of chemicals left unregulated for so long that they now permeate our environment and have found their way into our drinking water, food supply, and bodies, with devastating health and financial consequences.)

This approach means that when these laws fail to ensure needed environmental protections, impacted people generally have little recourse other than to protest or seek better candidates in the next political election, when it is often too late and irreparable damage has been done.

Moreover, this approach of “protection by statute” means that the burdens of environmental pollution—toxic air, contaminated water, and the growing impacts of the climate crisis—often fall most heavily on those whom the political process ignores. Historical and present-day inequities mean that the worst of these impacts are often concentrated in communities of color, Indigenous communities, and/or low-income communities. And the fact that even low levels of pollution disproportionately harm children, including those developing in utero, means that future generations often bear the brunt of this flawed system. 

From left: Elden wears Annafie top from Kidswear Collective, custom paper tie. Aria wears Babaà cardigan, Confiture shirt from Kidswear Collective, Burberry dress from Kidswear Collective, own tights and shoes; Kaysha wears Maison Ava x Kidswear Collective jacket and trousers, shirt from Kidswear Collective, custom paper tie, own shoes. James wears Il Porticciolo shirt, Benedita shorts from Kidswear Collective, custom paper flower brooch, own shoes. Mayana wears Pepa London shirt from Kidswear Collective, Adam Jones Studio apron
From left: Elden wears Annafie top from Kidswear Collective, custom paper tie, own shoes. Aria wears Babaà cardigan, Confiture shirt from Kidswear Collective, Burberry dress from Kidswear Collective, own tights and shoes. Kaysha wears Maison Ava x Kidswear Collective jacket and trousers, shirt from Kidswear Collective, custom paper tie, own shoes. James wears Il Porticciolo shirt from Kidswear Collective, custom paper flower brooch, own shoes. Mayana wears Pepa London shirt from Kidswear Collective, Adam Jones Studio apron, own shoes

Not only is this approach—which places the burdens of environmental pollution on those it deliberately excludes from the political process—morally abhorrent; it is economically foolish. The near- and long-term effects of exposure to pollution makes us all more vulnerable to disease and economic hardship. Exposure to environmental contaminants causes a range of health harms that include asthma, heart disease, dementia, and cancers of all kinds. The cognitive effects of lead poisoning are perhaps best known, but polluted environments can have a myriad of lasting effects on a person’s learning abilities. The destruction of ecosystems around the country, as well as our climate more broadly, is subjecting our communities to the rising threat of floods, droughts, wildfires, disease, deadly heat, and more.  

All of this costs us money through reduced human potential and economic activity, lost property values, resources required for emergency response services, disaster relief, and health care. At the same time, this environmental desecration deprives us of the emotional, physical, and psychological well-being that only time in nature can provide.   

From left: Mayana wears Bonpoint blouse and Ralph Lauren skirt from Kidswear Collective, Façon Jacmin dress, Adam Jones Studio apron skirt, own shoes. Oscar wears Façon Jacmin jacket, Julia Sue Dotson custom paper apron, own jeans and shoes; Elden wears Love Brand shirt from Kidswear Collective, Adam Jones Studio vest, Julia Sue Dotson custom paper apron, own pants and shoes

Environmental degradation also undermines our fundamental freedoms. Neurotoxins and other environmental contaminants undermine the right to a quality education, and the disproportionate impacts of water, air, and soil pollution undermine the right to equal treatment under the law. The right to fish, hunt, and trap found in many state constitutions is being stymied by the loss of healthy habitat and species decline caused by mistreatment of natural resources. The safety and sanctity of our homes, and the property rights to which we are constitutionally entitled, are undermined when pollution crosses property or state lines or climate change-fueled disasters destroy our towns and cities. And the health impacts of outdoor air pollution, including asthma attacks or heart conditions, limit our other fundamental rights. 

As former Pennsylvania state Sen. Franklin Kury famously said, “Freedom of speech will be meaningless if we suffocate on polluted air.”

Constitutional Green Amendments transform this legal paradigm, adding overarching protections that explicitly empower our people and our government to more effectively protect the environment, while proactively preventing its degradation. 

Green Amendments, as I have defined them, are constitutional amendments added to the Bill of Rights section of our state constitutions, which recognize and protect the inalienable rights of all people, including future generations, to pure water, clean air, a safe climate, and healthy environments. By virtue of their placement in these Bills of Rights (called a Declaration of Rights in some states) and their carefully crafted language, Green Amendments put environmental rights on an equal constitutional footing with other civil, human, and political rights.

Elden wears Helen Macintyre Studio Solar System headpiece, Petit Pli vest, Rachel Riley shirt, Gucci shorts from Kidswear Collective, custom paper collar by Tova Bach, stylist’s own socks, own shoes
Ares wears Adam Jones Studio shorts, Anciela beaded top, own shirt and shoes, stylist’s own socks, custom wings by Caterina Guarna

As with these other fundamental freedoms, Green Amendments require all government officials within a state—elected, appointed, and regulatory, as well as those working at the state, county, or local level—to affirmatively consider environmental rights and prioritize their protection in all decision-making. Green Amendments further require that environmental rights be protected equitably for all communities, regardless of race, ethnicity, or socioeconomic status. And they require that natural resources be protected generationally, helping to ensure that future generations have the healthy environment they need to lead safe and prosperous lives. 

Green Amendments empower people to raise their expectations of government and to advocate more firmly and confidently for environmental protection. When there is a legal gap in environmental protection or implementation that results in dangerous environmental harm, these amendments provide explicit constitutional language that can be relied upon to secure needed protection. When government officials fail to fulfill their constitutional duty, or when the laws as written, interpreted, and applied fail to honor the environmental rights of the people or the obligation of the government to protect the state’s natural resources, Green Amendments provide a powerful tool to compel protection in court.

From left: Kaysha, Aria, and Ines wear Benedita dresses, Bonpoint blouses from Kidswear Collective, custom paper collars by Tova Bach, own shoes and socks
From left: Kaysha wears Les Fleurs top, Gucci top from Kidswear Collective, Façon Jacmin skirt, stylist’s own socks, custom wings by Caterina Guarna. Ares wears Adam Jones Studio vest and shorts, Anciela beaded top, own shirt, stylist’s own socks, custom wings by Caterina Guarna. Elden wears Adam Jones Studio shirt and shorts

When it comes to the environment, states have a tremendous amount of authority.  While the federal government can obligate states to provide a basic level of environmental protection, states have the authority to do more to protect their residents. Passing a constitutional obligation on all government officials within a state to protect environmental rights equitably and preserve natural resources for both present and future generations can secure a higher level of environmental care than that afforded by federal law. While a federal Green Amendment will ultimately be needed in order to ensure our Congress, president, federal judges and regulatory agencies honor and protect our environmental rights, state-level constitutional action is especially meaningful and accessible in the near term. 

“Green Amendments put environmental rights on an equal constitutional footing with other civil, human, and political rights.”

Maya K. van Rossum, writer

Currently, there are three states with constitutional Green Amendments in place: Pennsylvania, Montana, and New York. In Pennsylvania, the amendment was used to restore the authority of local governments to protect residential communities from industrial fracking operations and to restore the obligation of fossil fuel fracking operations to comply with environmental protection standards. In Montana, it was the presence of a Green Amendment that allowed 16 youth to successfully restore the right and obligation of government officials to consider the climate-changing implications of their decisions. New York’s amendment is only a few years old, but it is already being used by communities to secure protection of their air, water, and public natural open spaces. Across the board, these amendments are being used to advance and secure people’s rights to drinking water free from toxic contamination, open space and the immense benefit it has for their communities, ecosystems and wildlife that enrich their lives, and farmland that’s free from contaminants that can render crops and livestock unusable. 

Moreover, Green Amendments are being used to rein in and mitigate serious consequences that stem from air pollution and are helping corral industries like oil and gas that inflict devastating consequences on our people and environment. At the same time, these amendments provide powerful support to environmentally friendly industries, such as wind and solar, and can boost ecologically supportive development that provides jobs and bolsters economic prosperity.

From left: Mayana wears Babaà jumper, Rachel Riley Dress from Kidswear Collective, Julia Sue Dotson paper hat, own shoes and socks. Ares wears Rachel Riley shorts from Kidswear Collective, Julia Sue Dotson paper hat, Florentina Leitner socks, own shoes. Ines wears Babaà jumper, Acien knitted panels (worn as trousers), Julia Sue Dotson paper hat, own jeans and shoes

Recognizing the need for transformational change when it comes to environmental protection, and inspired by the progress Green Amendments can and do achieve, over 20 additional states are working with Green Amendments for the Generations, the nonprofit I founded, to secure the powerful protections these Amendments offer.

The Green Amendment movement is a solution whose time has come, and it’s one that transcends political party, generation, race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status.

From left: Ines and Aria wear Marisol-inspired cardboard box structures by Maya Aska

In a moment when many are disillusioned by U.S. politics and our government’s inability to achieve essential environmental protections, the Green Amendment movement is leveraging the most powerful tools our democracy has—our state and federal constitutions—to secure environmental rights, environmental justice, natural resources protection, and generational security. By passing Green Amendments in every state, we can make sure that our environment, our health, and our lives are protected for generations to come. 

Ares wears Adam Jones Studio shorts, Anciela beaded top, own shirt and shoes, stylist’s own socks, custom wings by Caterina Guarna

Talent
Oscar (Grace and Galor), Elden (Grace and Galor), Mayana (Grace and Galor), Ares (Grace and Galor), Inez (Bruce and Brown), Aria (Bruce and Brown), Kaysha (Bruce and Brown), James (Bruce and Brown)
Set designer
Helen Macintyre
Props
Caterina Guarna, Maya-Aska, and Tova Bach
Production and casting
Alana Company
Executive Producer
Alex Gonzalez
Producer
Florence Bedell-Brill
Photography assistants
Pierre Lequeux and Scott Brickett
Styling assistants
Annabelle Lily Pearson and Caterina Guarna
Set Design Assistant
Nick Wallis
Production Assistant
Nicolas Garrido Ybañez
Production Assistant and Equipment
Gerard Markes
Location
Lockinge Estate, Oxfordshire

This story first appeared in Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate with the headline, “A Green Amendment For Every State.”


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The US Constitution Left Out Nature. Green Amendments Could Fix That

 

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