2 resultados para JURIDICAL DEFENSE OF THE CONSTITUTION
em Andina Digital - Repositorio UASB-Digital - Universidade Andina Simón Bolívar
Resumo:
Este artículo pretende explicar el auge que, en Colombia, ha tenido la defensa judicial de la Constitución. Para tal efecto, se hace una breve caracterización del constitucionalismo colombiano, identificando y explicando ocho de sus rasgos: la existencia de una historia y de una tradición de control constitucional, la defensa de la Constitución como asunto público, la Carta Política como norma invasiva de la vida social, económica y política del país, la desconcentración del control constitucional, la construcción permanente y progresiva del constitucionalismo por vía judicial, el diálogo con otros sistemas constitucionales, la existencia de una identidad constitucional, y la continuidad relativa con el sistema y la tradición jurídica. Con fundamento en esta caracterización, se obtendrán algunas conclusiones sobre la defensa judicial de la Constitución.
Resumo:
The point of departure for these reflections is life, since its protection is the central purpose encouraging the defense of human rights and of public health. Life in the Andes has an exceptional diversity. Particularly in Ecuador, my country, this diversity constitutes a characteristic sign that is expressed in two main forms: natural megadiversity and multiculturalism. Indeed, Ecuador’s small territory synthesizes practically all types of lifezones that exist on Earth, having received the gift of high average rates of solar energy and abundant nutritional sources, which have facilitated the natural reproduction of countless species that show their beautiful vitality in the variety of ecosystems that compose the Andean mountain range, the tropical plains, the Amazon humid forests, and the Galapagos Islands. But besides being a highly biodiverse country, it is also a plurinational and multi-cultural society, in which the activity of human beings, organized into social conglomerates of different historical and cultural backgrounds, have formed more than a dozen nations and peoples. Regrettably this natural and human wealth has not been able to bear its best fruits due to the violent operation of a deep social inequity – unfortunately also one of the highest in the Americas—which conspires against life and is reproduced in national and international inequitable relations. This structural inequity has changed its form throughout the centuries and currently has reached its highest and most perverse level of development.