1st Edition

An Indigenous Cosmopoetics of Justice Law, Posthumanism and the Ecology of Cocoa

By Renan Porto Copyright 2026

This book examines cocoa farming in northeast Brazil to explore a fundamental question: can ecological relationships create their own form of law?

Through the study of indigenous people and landless workers who use sustainable farming practices to restore damaged lands, the book analyses how humans and nature together create social and ecological systems that function as a kind of "viscous law,” with flexible rules emerging from relationships with the land and its diverse lifeforms. Unlike rigid modern legal systems, this "viscous law" adapts to the realities of cocoa ecology and how it connects people, plants, and animals within global environmental systems. It addresses the practical needs of land rights struggles while recognising relationships that Western legal systems often ignore.

An Indigenous Cosmopoetics of Justice is of interest to legal theorists, as well as those with interests in the areas of indigenous studies, postcolonial studies and ecology.

Chapter 1:Introduction.

Chapter 2: Decomposing the Law

Chapter 3: A Perspectivist Autoethnography

Chapter 4: An Autoethnography of Modernisation

Chapter 5: The Entropies of Modernisation

Chapter 6: Cocoa Knots

Chapter 7: Composting the Collectives

Chapter 8: Conclusion

Biography

Renan Porto is a writer and postdoctorate researcher at the Institute of Literary Studies of the University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland. Holding a PhD in law from the University of Westminster, London, his work spans critical legal theory, environmental humanities, indigenous studies, posthuman anthropology and postcolonial theories. Porto's research endeavours to reimagine political and legal categories through indigenous perspectives, exploring their potential to forge new forms of existence in the face of climate change. He is the author of the book of essays Políticas de Riobaldo (Cepe, 2021) and the poetry book O Cólera A Febre (Urutau, 2018).