Courts, rights of rivers and the city: insights from Ecuador

Fernando Andrés Martínez Moscoso (Primer Autor), Mildred E. Warner (Último Autor), Fernando Andrés Martínez Moscoso (Autor de Correspondencia)

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

Urban rivers promote habitats, support ecosystems, and provide human access to water, but also face contamination, especially due to inadequate wastewater treatment. The Ecuadorian constitution of 2008 expanded environmental rights to include rights of nature. We analyse the judicial decision on the River Monjas in Quito, Ecuador in which rights of rivers were articulated through an anthropocentric lens that links rights to the city with rights of nature, including rights to a healthy environment, water, heritage, and sustainability. However, by focusing responsibility soley on the city, the Monjas case was limited in its ability to promote a broader ecosystem framework.
Idioma originalInglés
Páginas (desde-hasta)604-621
Número de páginas18
PublicaciónWater International
Volumen50
N.º6
Fecha en línea anticipada30 may. 2025
DOI
EstadoPublicación electrónica previa a su impresión - 30 may. 2025

Palabras clave

  • Community well-being
  • Doctrine of public trust
  • Ecuador
  • Municipal responsibility
  • Right to the city
  • Rights of nature
  • Rivers

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