L’Acuerdo de Escazú: il primo trattato sull’ambiente in vigore in America Latina

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.13130/2612-6672/15831

Keywords:

Acuerdo Escazú, Latin America, environment, environmentalism, indigenous peoples, extractivism

Abstract

The Escazú Agreement, the first environmental treaty to order that signatory States render available all information on the projects which may have an environmental impact, guarantee that citizens participate in decisional processes and adopt measures to protect defenders of indigenous environments and peoples, entered into force on 22 April 2021. Building on these premises, the paper reports some data with the aim of briefly tracing the framework in which environmental activists work. These, together with indigenous peoples, oppose the extractivist development model adopted by the region’s government in the last twenty years, which has had – and still has – a significant impact on the environment, has increased social conflicts, and triggered a violence spiral against environmentalists and some indigenous communities, thus transforming Latin America into the most dangerous place for those who protect the environment

Author Biography

Marzia Anna Linda Maria Rosti, University of Milan

Associate Professor

Published

2021-06-25

Issue

Section

Chronicles