In the course of the proceedings, cases are treated that involve polluted water, deforestation, oil spills, hydroelectric dams that will flood communities and cause major displacement, murdered antimining activists, ‘‘man-made earthquakes’’ caused by fracking, the destruction of the Great Barrier Reef, the oil extraction in Yasuni in Ecuador, and attempts to commodify nature such as REDDþ. Unifying the accusations brought forth before the tribunal is that they are animated by outrage at losses that have happened in specific locales in ways that victimize specific groups. Almost all cases involve historical injustices and rights in relation to sacrifice zones—spaces physically and culturally destroyed for the benefit of ‘‘the broader good,’’ usually taken to mean industrial progress or the demands of capitalist growth