{"title":"Amparos Filed by Indigenous Communities Against Mining Concessions in Mexico: Implications for a Shift in Ecological Law","authors":"Carla Sbert Carlsson","doi":"10.22201/IIJ.24485306E.2018.20.11891","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Four indigenous communities in Mexico have initiated amparos seeking constitutional protection against mining concessions that have allegedly violated their constitutional rights. In addition to their significant implications for indigenous rights in Mexico, these amparos are part of a growing reaction against laws that prioritize mining interests over community land uses and ecological values. This article explores the relationship of these cases with a new legal paradigm that is emerging in response to the inability of environmental law to adequately address the deepening ecological crisis: ecological law. From an ecological law perspective, these amparos are of interest because of the possibility for courts to give priority to indigenous values ascribing spiritual, ecological and relational meanings to the land and its resources, over economic interests seeking to exploit the land and resources for commercial gain without regard to ecological limits. The article introduces a “lens of ecological law” conceived to understand the nature of the required shift from the current law to ecological law, and then examines the amparo filed by the community of San Miguel del Progreso–Juba Wajiin from this standpoint. The analysis shows that the provisions of the Mining Law challenged by the amparo pose serious obstacles for ecological law (prioritizing mining over any other land use), and it points to certain synergies between indigenous rights and ecological law. While the SCJN did not examine the merits of the amparo because the concessions had been withdrawn, the amparo offers insights into the challenges facing a shift away from the current legal paradigm.","PeriodicalId":41684,"journal":{"name":"Mexican Law Review","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2017-12-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Mexican Law Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.22201/IIJ.24485306E.2018.20.11891","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"LAW","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
Four indigenous communities in Mexico have initiated amparos seeking constitutional protection against mining concessions that have allegedly violated their constitutional rights. In addition to their significant implications for indigenous rights in Mexico, these amparos are part of a growing reaction against laws that prioritize mining interests over community land uses and ecological values. This article explores the relationship of these cases with a new legal paradigm that is emerging in response to the inability of environmental law to adequately address the deepening ecological crisis: ecological law. From an ecological law perspective, these amparos are of interest because of the possibility for courts to give priority to indigenous values ascribing spiritual, ecological and relational meanings to the land and its resources, over economic interests seeking to exploit the land and resources for commercial gain without regard to ecological limits. The article introduces a “lens of ecological law” conceived to understand the nature of the required shift from the current law to ecological law, and then examines the amparo filed by the community of San Miguel del Progreso–Juba Wajiin from this standpoint. The analysis shows that the provisions of the Mining Law challenged by the amparo pose serious obstacles for ecological law (prioritizing mining over any other land use), and it points to certain synergies between indigenous rights and ecological law. While the SCJN did not examine the merits of the amparo because the concessions had been withdrawn, the amparo offers insights into the challenges facing a shift away from the current legal paradigm.
墨西哥的四个土著社区已发起宪法保护,寻求宪法保护,反对据称侵犯其宪法权利的采矿特许权。除了对墨西哥土著居民权利的重大影响外,这些宪法保障条款也是反对将采矿利益置于社区土地使用和生态价值之上的法律的一部分。本文探讨了这些案例与一种新的法律范式之间的关系,这种法律范式是为了应对环境法无法充分解决日益加深的生态危机而出现的:生态法。从生态法的角度来看,这些宪法保护条款是有意义的,因为法院有可能优先考虑土著价值,赋予土地及其资源精神、生态和关系意义,而不是寻求开发土地和资源以获取商业利益而不考虑生态限制的经济利益。本文引入“生态法的视角”,以理解从现行法律到生态法律的必要转变的本质,然后从这个角度审视圣米格尔del progresso - juba Wajiin社区提起的宪法保护诉讼。分析表明,受到宪法保护令挑战的《采矿法》条款对生态法律(优先考虑采矿而不是其他任何土地使用)构成严重障碍,并指出土著权利与生态法律之间的某些协同作用。虽然SCJN没有审查宪法权利保护令的优点,因为特许权已经撤销,但宪法权利保护令提供了对从当前法律范式转变所面临的挑战的见解。