Se encontraron 4 investigaciones
El proyecto busca evaluar el rol de los marcos normativos e institucionales Canadienses, en consonancia con la institucionalidad local, para acortar la brecha de género en el sector extractivo en función a: La habilidad para influenciar las buenas prácticas corporativas y el cumplimiento de obligaciones de derechos de empresas Canadienses operando en el Perú. La capacidad de estas empresas de mejorar sus relaciones comunitarias y promover mayores oportunidades para incluir voces y perspectivas de las mujeres en procesos participativos, entre otros, relacionados a la implementación de proyectos extractivos en el Perú.
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Esta investigación evalúa el alcance y naturaleza de los mecanismos participativos de gestión ambiental en el Peru relacionados al contexto minero. Concretamente, busca analizar hasta qué punto estos mecanismos integran o excluyen la realidad, preocupaciones y expectativas de las mujeres a fin de mejor responder a los impactos diferenciados del desarrollo extractivo. Los resultados de este estudio buscan contribuir a reforzar el entendimiento y aporte de la perspectiva de género para el diseño de políticas publicas y las propias relaciones comunitarias.
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The Locating Nature project explores the differing ideas of the human that underpin global law and policy-making on the environment. Areas of interest include the relationship between human rights law and the environment; environmental justice, particularly with regard to natural resources and energy; counter-hegemonic uses of law through notions such as ¿the environmentalism of the poor¿ or ¿the environmentalism of the people¿; ¿environmentality¿ and the evolution of new areas of expertise, multi-level governance, and political subjectivities; the influence of neoliberal ideology on law and environment; and the philosophical and practical effects of recognizing the rights of non-human entities, including the rights of nature.
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Over the last two decades, the Latin American region has experienced a significant expansion of extractive activities (minerals and hydrocarbons) promoted by the discourse of new extractivism. This refers to an industry that working with technological innovations and a greater regulatory framework aims to provide the rents and revenues deemed vital by the state for the implementation of social policies intended to redistribute wealth, enhance equality rights and social inclusion nationwide. This postdoctoral research project scrutinizes the premise that ¿extractive-led development leads to greater equality and social inclusion¿ under the government of the so-called ¿Citizens Revolution¿ in Ecuador. It does so by asking two questions: a) What other important dimensions of equality are excluded when focusing exclusively on equality achieved by means of redistribution of mining royalties?; and, b) To what extent do the new politics of extractivism in Ecuador, purportedly aimed at enhancing equality of outcomes, in fact, risk further aggravating existing inequalities and reinforce patterns of social exclusion? A contextual model to assess ¿inclusive equality¿ developed by Colleen Shepard and informed by a post-colonial feminist lens is used to respond to both research questions. Methodologically, Shepard¿s model is implemented in the case of ¿Women Defenders of Mother Earth¿, a peasant women anti-mining organization based in Cuenca, Ecuador. The research shows how the rhetoric of new extractivism remains problematic as it is deeply embedded in a logic of neo-colonialism that neglects alternative community-based development models, silences the voice of those who oppose extractive-led development, and is infused by a patriarchal ethic. Moreover, the project discuss the extent to which an exclusive emphasis on economic redistribution exalts the material aspects of equality at the expense of cultural and gender equality
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