Abstract
In 2008, Ecuador became the first country to grant legal rights to
nature. In this article, I examine how this happened. I show that while
proponents of nature's rights acted during a key political moment, their
efforts were successful due to the presence of environmentalist social
movements that elevated the environmental agenda at the national level
during prior decades, and due to the power of indigenous organizations and
their call to recognize Ecuador as a “plurinational” polity, demanding
respect for indigenous territories and ways of life and incorporating
politicized versions of indigenous beliefs about the environment. The study
considers the consequences of mobilization for legal innovation and
institutional change, and shows the complexity of struggles over the
environment in the global South. It is based on research at the Ecuadorian
National Legislative Assembly archive, semistructured interviews with
respondents involved in the politics of nature and the constitutional
assembly, and secondary historical sources.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Law,General Social Sciences
Cited by
58 articles.
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