15 resultados para Right of way (Land).
em Universidad del Rosario, Colombia
Resumo:
In this work we analyze the reforms carried out by the Mexican state in the nineties of the 20th century, in the items concerning the policies of housing and urban land, based on an exhaustive review of the main actions, programs and changes in the legal and institutional frame that applies for each of these fields. The nineties represent a "breaking point" in the way the State considers the satisfaction of the right to the housing and attends the offer of urbanized land for a tidy and sustainable urban development. In this period of time, the approach of direct intervention in developing and financing housing and creation of land reserves has changed into another one, ruled by the logic of the market. The balance to the first decade of the 21st century is ambiguous, as neither the housing policy has solved the housing shortage for low-income population, nor the land policy has eliminated the illegal urban growth.
Resumo:
The implementation of anti-drug policies that focus on illicit crops in the Andean countries faces many significant obstacles, one of which is the cultural clash it generates between the main stakeholders. On the one hand one finds the governments and agencies that attempt to implement crop substitution and eradication policies and on the other the peasant and natives communities that have traditionally grown and used coca or those peasants who have found in coca an instrument of power and political leverage that they never had before. The confrontation about coca eradication, alternative development and other anti-drug policies in coca growing areas transcends drug related issues and is part of a wider and deeper confrontation that reflects the long-term unsolved conflicts of the Andean societies. All Andean countries have stratified and fragmented societies in which peasants and Indians have been excluded from power. In Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru most peasants belong to native communities many of which have remained segregated from “white” society. The mixing of the races (mestizaje) in Colombia occurred early during the Conquest and Colony. Those of Indian descent became subservient to the Spanish and Creoles. The society that evolved was (and still is) highly hierarchical, authoritarian, and has subjacent racist values. The resulting political system has been exclusionary of large portions of the population. Among Indian communities coca has been used for millennia and its use has become an identity symbol of their resistance against what may be looked at as foreign invasion. “The Andean Indian chews coca because that way he affirms his identity as son and owner of the land that yesterday the Spaniard took away and today the landowner keeps away from him. To chew coca is to be Indian...and to quietly and obstinately challenge the contemporary lords that descend from the old encomenderos and the older conquistadors” (Vidart, 1991: 61, author’s translation). In Andean literature on illegal drugs as well as in seminars, colloquia and other meetings where drug policies are debated, complaints are frequently expressed about the treatment of coca in the same category as cocaine, heroin, morphine amphetamines and other “hard” drugs. The complainants assert that “coca is not cocaine” and that it is unfair to classify coca, a nature given plant which has been used for millennia in the Andes without significant negative effects on users, in the same category as man made psychotropic drugs. They also argue that coca has manifold social and religious meanings in indigenous cultures, that coca is sacred and that the requirement of the1961 Single Convention demanding that Bolivia and Peru completely eradicate coca within 25 years is limiting Indigenous communities in their freedom to practice their religions. In most debates about drug interdiction, the views of those who oppose that approach are not accepted as legitimate. Indeed, “prohibitionists” demonize drugs and those who oppose drug policies in Latin America frequently demonize the United States as the imperialist power that imposes them. This dual polarization is a main obstacle to establish a meaningful policy debate aimed at broadening the policy consensus necessary for successful policy implementation. This essay surveys the status of coca in the United Nations Conventions, explains why it is confusing, and how a few changes would eliminate some of the sources of conflict and help organize and control licit coca markets in the Andes. The current disorganized and weakly controlled legal coca market in Peru has been analyzed to demonstrate its deficiencies and to illustrate possible improvements in international drug control policies.
Resumo:
This article offers a theoretical interpretation of the dispositions on land restitution contained in the famous “Victims’ Bill”, which was debated in the Colombian Congress during the year 2008. The bill included specific mechanisms aimed at guaranteeing the restitution of land to victims of the Colombian armed conflict. At the time, the bill was endorsed by all the main political actors in the country –notably the government and the elites that support it, on the one hand, and victims’ and human rights organizations and other opposition groups, on the other–. The fact that the restitution of land to victims of the Colombian armed conflict was being considered as a serious possibility by all political actors in the country seemed to indicate the existence of a consensus among actors whose positions are ordinarily opposed, on an issue that has traditionally led to high levels of polarization. This consensus is quite puzzling, because it seems to be at odds with the interests and/or the conceptions of justice advocated by these political actors, and because the restitution of land faces enormous difficulties both from a factual and a normative point of view, which indicates that it may not necessarily be the best alternative for dealing with the issue of land distribution in Colombia. This article offers an interpretation of said consensus, arguing that it is only an apparent consensus in which the actors are actually misrepresenting their interests and conceptions of justice, while at the same time adopting divergent strategies of implementation aimed at fulfilling their true interests. Nevertheless, the article concludes that the common adherence by all actors to the principle of restorative justice might bring about its actual realization, and thus produce an outcome that, in spite (and perhaps even because) of being unintended, might substantively contribute to solving the problem of unequal land distribution in Colombia. Even though the article focuses in some detail on the specificities of the 2008 Bill, it attempts to make a general argument about the state of the discussion on how to deal with the issue of land distribution in the country. Consequently, it may still be relevant today, especially considering that a new Bill on land restitution is currently being discussed in Congress, which includes the same restitution goals as the Victims’ Bill and many of its procedural and substantive details, and which therefore seems to reflect a similar consensus to the one analyzed in the article.
Resumo:
Conscientious objection is defined as the ability to depart from statutory mandates because of intimate convictions based on ethical or religious convictions. A discussion of this issue presents the conflict between the idea of a State concerned with the promotion of individual rights or the protection of general interests and an idea of law based on the maintenance of order and against a view of the law as a means to claim the protection of minimum conditions of the person. From this conflict is drawn the possibility to argue whether conscientious objection should be guaranteed as a fundamental right of freedom of conscience or as a statutory authority legislatively conferred upon persons. This paper sets out a discussion around the two views so as to develop a position that is more consistent with the context of social and constitutional law.
Resumo:
This article characterizes the conditions of the informal land and housing supply during the first decade of the xxi century in Bogota, regarding magnitude and location of the informal urban growth (new occupations in the periphery and informal densification of consolidated areas), housing conditions in recent occupations and the characteristics of the land market. The situation of the last decade has been reconstructed based in aerial photography analysis, census data quantification and data analysis from planning and control public entities. Results suggest that due to the relative land scarcity in Bogotá, among other aspects, the informal market dynamics have experimented changes compared to previous decades, because the growth in consolidated urban areas becomes more important than the informal urbanization of the peripheries, but at the same time informality transcends the municipal perimeter to the neighboring municipalities.
Resumo:
El fenómeno de la globalización es una realidad que caracteriza la política internacional mundial que hace referencia principalmente a los procesos económicos, y a las innovaciones tecnológicas, sociales y culturales que están transformando nuestra manera de percibir e interpretar el mundo. En Colombia se han dado cambios muy importantes para el reconocimiento de los derechos de los grupos afrocolombianos. Uno de los cambios importantes, es el derecho de las comunidades afrocolombianas en cuanto a su desarrollo social, cultural y económico. Dentro del contexto nacional, el Pacifico colombiano es un territorio caracterizado por ser un polo de desarrollo, una región reconocida por su riqueza biológica y cultural, donde se realizan grandes proyectos de desarrollo y de extracción de recursos naturales. Pero estos proyectos tiene una alta incidencia en la pérdida de control de las comunidades sobre su territorio e incluso sobre su propio destino. La Muriel Minning Company es una multinacional de los Estados Unidos que actualmente desarrolla el Mega proyecto minero "Mandé Norte"; el gobierno colombiano le otorgó nueve títulos mineros para explotar y comercializar las reservas de cobre y los subproductos de oro y molibdeno. Colombia, como muchos otros países del sur, esta siendo fuertemente afectada en términos de diversidad cultural, construcción de sociedades sustentables y preservación del medio ambiente, por la intervención que en nuestros territorios hacen las multinacionales a través de megaproyectos, que sólo están generando pobreza, perdida de la diversidad cultural y biológica, deterioro de las condiciones ambientales sustentables, desplazamiento forzado.
Resumo:
En Colombia, la construcción, operación y administración de los puertos exige el otorgamiento, por parte del Estado, de un contrato de concesión a sociedades portuarias, el cual se otorga previo agotamiento de un trámite administrativo especial de iniciativa privada, mediante el ejercicio del derecho de petición en interés particular o por medio de una oferta oficiosa impulsada por el Estado. Los trámites enunciados están previstos en la Ley 1ª de 1991, reglamentada actualmente por el Decreto 4735 de 2009. Si bien el régimen legal prevé mecanismos que permiten la comparecencia de terceros dentro del trámite, no contempla la manera como debe tramitarse la solicitud de concesión portuaria, radicada por fuera del término previsto en el artículo 10 de la Ley 1ª de 1991, cuando ésta no es una oposición o propuesta alternativa a una solicitud, sobre una misma área en estudio de petición de concesión.
Resumo:
Estudio de caso en el análisis de la situación afrontada por la población de Papúa Occidental durante el periodo de 1962-1969, época en la que la nueva República de Indonesia y Holanda se disputaban la soberanía sobre el territorio papuano. Dicha disputa tuvo lugar durante la época de Guerra Fría, lo que llevó a que Estados Unidos junto con sus aliados en la región y la Unión Soviética intervinieran en él. Finalmente, Estados Unidos teniendo en cuenta sus intereses favoreció a la República de Indonesia y obligó a Holanda firmar el Acuerdo de Nueva York, en el que se establecía que sería la Autoridad Ejecutiva Temporal de las Naciones Unidas quien administrara y preparara el territorio para un futuro Acto de Libre Elección. En cualquiera que fuese el panorama, las Naciones Unidas no cumplieron con lo establecido en el Acuerdo lo que llevó a que fueran condescendientes con todas las peticiones indonesias sin tener en cuenta los deseos y los derechos de la población papuana, violándose su derecho de auto-determinación de los pueblos.
Resumo:
En Colombia, la construcción, operación y administración de los puertos, exige el otorgamiento por parte del Estado, de una concesión portuaria a sociedades portuarias, la cual se concede previo el agotamiento de un trámite administrativo especial de iniciativa privada, mediante el ejercicio del derecho de petición en interés particular, o por medio de una oferta oficiosa impulsada por el Estado. Los trámites enunciados están previstos en la Ley 1ª de 10 de enero de 1991 y en el Decreto 4735 de 2 de diciembre de 2009. Si bien, el régimen legal prevé mecanismos que permiten la comparecencia de terceros dentro del trámite, no contempla la manera como debe tramitarse la solicitud de concesión portuaria, radicada por fuera del término previsto en el artículo 10 de la Ley 1ª de 1991, sin que constituya una oposición o propuesta alternativa a una solicitud, sobre una misma área en estudio de petición de concesión.
Resumo:
This article discusses the problematic and evading development of conscientiousobjection in the context of the Colombian constitutional jurisprudence. From a historical allusion to the famous case of the “Mayflower Pilgrims” –which serve as areference to the central problems that faces the objector–, it seeks to define the scopeof conscientious objection as a fundamental right (as a fundamental justice claim)in regard to the “factual” and “legal” possibilities for its exercise, for which there willbe a brief contrast between the most representative cases decided by the ColombianConstitutional Court in such matter. The core of the article is the idea that thereis an ideological prevalence that, unjustifiably, makes it difficult and in some casesdenies the exercise of the right to object in consciousness, particularly when it comes tothe right of life in regard to the abortion case.
Resumo:
The urban growth in Latino American cities, in a neoliberal context, has led to several population groups to having no possibilities to the access to urban land. Informal and irregular urban settlements increase, requiring attention from local governments, with actions and strategies in order to achieve both the regularization of such situation and further prevention. In the city of Córdoba different informal and irregular operations have taken place promoted by different actors. Furthermore, policies focused on regularization which have been promoted, have few intervention mechanisms, a fact that becomes critical, especially for the urban problems it causes. The main aim of this article is to present a classification over different modes of urban land acquirement taking place out of both urban and civil legislations. Afterwards, different informal settlement typologies are described, as well as the policies focused on them, together with their respective effects and impacts.
Resumo:
Los instrumentos de la reforma urbana se han concebido para disciplinar el funcionamiento de los mercados inmobiliarios. Este artículo trata sobre uno de estos instrumentos, el reajuste de tierras. En la primera parte se esbozan, de manera sucinta, algunos rasgos de las formaciones sociales y territoriales del Japón y de Colombia con relación a la propiedad y el uso del suelo urbano. En la segunda presentamos tres experiencias en el empleo del reajuste tierras, comenzando por la restauración posguerra de Nagoya por ser, según nuestro parecer, la más emblemática y original de las múltiples que se pueden encontrar en el Japón. Las otras dos corresponden al proceso de reconstrucción posterremoto de la ciudad de Armenia en Colombia: una de ellas fracasada y otra exitosa.-----The instruments of the Urban Reform have been conceived to discipline the operation of the real estate markets. This work deals with on one these instruments, the Land Readjustment. In the first part they are outlined, of way succinct, some social and territorial characteristics of the formation of Japan and Colombia in relation to the property and the use of the urban land. In second we displayed three experiences in the use of the readjustment land, beginning by the one of the restoration postwar period of Nagoya to be, according to ours to seem, most emblematic and original of the manifold that can be found in Japan. The other two correspond to the reconstruction process post-earthquake of the city of Armenia in Colombia: one of them failed and another successful one.
Resumo:
Teniendo en cuenta tres casos dentro del contexto del conflicto armado donde la jurisdicción penal colombiana estudia la admisión o exclusión de medios probatorios producidos a partir de injerencias de comunicaciones, encontramos que no siempre se aplica la regla de exclusión cuando no cuentan con una orden judicial previa. Ante este problema, buscamos como se ha solucionado, teniendo como referente la el Derecho Internacional Humanitario, el Derecho Internacional de los Derechos Humanos. Lo anterior nos da base para entender la regla de exclusión de que se ha venido desarrollando dentro del Derecho Internacional Penal. Si bien estas reglas nos sirven para solucionar estos tres casos, terminan siendo contradictorios a lo que ha venido desarrollando la Corte Constitucional. De esta manera, si bien esta Corte consideró que la regla de Estatuto de Roma, va en concordancia con la nuestra regla de exclusión nacional, tal afirmación es errónea.
Resumo:
El presente trabajo se enmarca en la Ley de Víctimas, Ley 1448 del año 2011, y aborda específicamente los casos en que se presenta oposición de una víctima o bien de un sujeto vulnerable, de especial protección, frente a la reclamación de restitución de un predio por una víctima. No aborda la generalidad de los casos de oposición. Habiendo delimitado el objeto de estudio que atañe, es necesario señalar que el presente trabajo, se centra en indagar la posición procesal y las capacidades probatorias del opositor víctima o sujeto vulnerable en este tipo de procesos bajo las circunstancias ya enunciadas, para entrar a estudiar si, a este sujeto procesal se le respeta o se le viola su derecho a la igualdad de parte dentro del proceso de restitución de tierras y qué alternativas pueden establecerse para hacer del acto de oponerse un acto más garantista.
Resumo:
The paper analyzes the effects of land reform on social development – poverty and land distribution-at the local level. Land reform in Colombia, understood as the allocation of public land to peasant, has granted 23 million hectares which comprises around 20% of Colombian territory and about 50% of usable productive land. Theoretically, the net impact of land reform on development is the combination of a poverty effect and a land distribution effect. Our findings suggest that land reform from 1961 onwards has slightly reduced poverty and mildly improved land distribution. Nonetheless,municipalities with strong presence of latifundia prior to1961 have experienced both a slower drop in poverty and a weaker improvement of land distribution .This paper finds that prevalence of latifundia partially offset the positive effect of land reform in promoting social development.