Infrastructure as Legal Persons: Recognizing the Labor of Buildings, Roads, and Bridges

The concept of legal personhood has expanded in surprising ways over the past century. Corporations, abstract collections of humans, are recognized as legal persons, capable of owning property, suing and being sued, and entering contracts. Artificial intelligence is increasingly discussed in similar terms. If entities without consciousness or traditional human qualities can be granted personhood,Continue reading “Infrastructure as Legal Persons: Recognizing the Labor of Buildings, Roads, and Bridges”

All Life as Laborers: Extending Personhood Beyond Animals

For decades, debates over animal rights and personhood have challenged humans to rethink the moral and legal status of non-human life. The concept of recognizing animals as legal persons, entitled to compensation and protections for their labor, is already radical in mainstream discourse. Yet if we follow this logic to its natural conclusion, the implicationsContinue reading “All Life as Laborers: Extending Personhood Beyond Animals”