The capstone thesis investigates the decline of the rule of law in Belarus, focusing on the authoritarian government's strategy of leveraging nature to consolidate power. The research identifies a foundation for environmental peace-building and the establishment of eco-centric laws rooted in local traditions and aligned with international standards. The study's innovative approach—using body-centered practices–dance, meditation, theatre–to engage activists in legal drafting—proved effective, producing a constitution draft that resonates with personal experiences and may guide future research in this area. The practical research part started with assembling a group of Belarusians through an open call, and a final eight participants were chosen based on their motivation letters and diverse background. Two people from the group have legal background, three people are environmental activists, and two have dance/performative experience. At the same time, a team of Belarusian expert collaborators has been recruited. It included an expert in environmental law from the oldest Belarusian eco-initiative (that was liquidated after the repressions of 2020), an expert in the assessment of war impacts on the environment, an expert in deep ecology discipline, and an expert in dark ecology philosophical thought. All names are kept confidential for the purpose of safety. For 3 months, from March to June, two teams were engaged in closely coordinated work, at first in the format of online workshops, lectures and debates, and later during a collective trip to Bialowieza woodland in between Poland and Belarus.