Pluri-National State-Building Processes in Ecuador Through Interculturality and Human Rights as a Process of Real Independence

Pluri-National State-Building Processes in Ecuador Through Interculturality and Human Rights as a Process of Real Independence

Daqui LEMA

Independence processes in the various states in Abya Yala (the Americas) require a critical analysis of the traditional narratives that were elaborated across the entire continent to conceal the ancient history of indigenous peoples prior to 1492. Historical constructions and…

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Mexico’s Constitution, Indigenous Rights and the Future

Mexico’s Constitution, Indigenous Rights and the Future

Hector Calleros

Energy generation, the construction of infrastructure, and mining exploitation – all of them aided by technological innovations – define the context in which many Indigenous communities and peoples in Mexico have been living in during the past 200 years, since Mexico’s independence in 1821. Environmental conservation…

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Guest Editorial: The Centenary of the Constitution of Liechtenstein

Guest Editorial: The Centenary of the Constitution of Liechtenstein

Anna GAMPER

Amongst the older constitutions of the world that are still in force, one constitution has received little international attention to date, even though it celebrates its hundredth birthday today. This is the Constitution of the tiny Principality of Liechtenstein, which was ratified on 5 October 1921 and published in the Liechtenstein Law Gazette…

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COVID-19 and Sexual and Reproductive Health: Challenging Abstraction and Neutrality in Public Health Emergency Responses

COVID-19 and Sexual and Reproductive Health: Challenging Abstraction and Neutrality in Public Health Emergency Responses

Debora DINIZ, Sinara GUMIERI & Luna BORGES

Among the main debated constitutional implications of COVID-19 is the impact of state interventions to protect public health on individual rights and freedoms, such as lockdowns and mobility restrictions, mask and vaccine mandates. However…

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Countering the Spread of COVID-19 by Means of Recommendations and its Constitutional Implications

Countering the Spread of COVID-19 by Means of Recommendations and its Constitutional Implications

Iain CAMERON & Anna JONSSON CORNELL

The COVID-19 pandemic led to a large number of countries taking sweeping executive powers to counter the spread of the virus. The debate has thus often been about whether such emergency powers have satisfied the legality, necessity and proportionality principles…

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