Environmental rights and conflicts over raw materials in Latin America: the Escazú Agreement is ready to come into force in 2021

Autor: Maihold, Günther, Reisch, Viktoria
Přispěvatelé: Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik -SWP- Deutsches Institut für Internationale Politik und Sicherheit
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Politikwissenschaft
Internationale Beziehungen
Political science
International relations
Umweltschutzauflage
Normensetzungsfunktion internationaler Akteure
Rohstoffabbau
Transparenz politischer/administrativer Prozesse
Sozialer Konflikt
Ökologischer Konflikt
Staatsbürgerrechte
Zugang zur Justiz
Zugang zu Regierungsinformationen
Internationale wirtschaftliche Interessendivergenzen
spezielle Ressortpolitik
internationale Beziehungen
Entwicklungspolitik

Special areas of Departmental Policy
International Relations
International Politics
Foreign Affairs
Development Policy

Lateinamerika
Umweltrecht
internationales Abkommen
Umweltschutz
Rohstoffpolitik
Umweltschaden
Konfliktpotential
Bodenrecht
indigene Völker
politische Partizipation
Menschenrechte
Wirtschaftspolitik
Interessenpolitik
Latin America
environmental law
international agreement
environmental protection
commodity policy
environmental damage
conflict potential
land law
indigenous peoples
political participation
human rights
economic policy
pressure-group politics
10500
Zdroj: 4/2021, SWP Comment, 8
Druh dokumentu: Stellungnahme<br />comment
ISSN: 1861-1761
DOI: 10.18449/2021C04
Popis: On 5 November 2020 Mexico ratified the so-called Escazú Agreement, a treaty between Latin American and Caribbean states on establishing regional transparency and en­viron­­ment standards, as the eleventh country to do so. The prescribed quorum of ratifications has thus been attained, and the agreement can come into force in 2021. This will launch an innovative multilateral instrument that is intended to create more citizen par­ticipation and improve the assertion of citizens’ rights in environmental matters. In Latin America, economic interests dominate when it comes to the exploitation of raw materials; furthermore, there is a large number of conflicts over resources. The agree­ment thus offers affected indigenous tribes and human-rights defenders more oppor­tu­nities for information, participation and access to the justice system in environmen­tal matters. Despite this binding first step, some leading countries in the region have so far failed to ratify the agreement. Many of them are reluctant to join, arguing that cer­tain provisions violate their national sovereignty and their freedom of decision. For Germany and Europe, the agreement offers new leverage for drafting supply chain laws. (author's abstract)
Databáze: SSOAR – Social Science Open Access Repository