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Pronunciamiento en El Salvador considera que los bosques son entidades vivientes

Forests in El Salvador

PARA PUBLICACIÓN INMEDIATA: 5 de junio de 2019

Contactos: Eneas Wilfredo Martínez Santos (eneaswilfredo@gmail.com, +503 70841322) Roberto Carlos Olivares Martínez (rcolivares@gmail.com, +503 77962043)
Grant Wilson (gwilson@earthlaw.org, +1 510-566-1063)

Ahuachapán, El Salvador: Hoy, en el Día Mundial del Medio Ambiente, la Asamblea Legislativa de El Salvador aprobó un pronunciamiento que considera que "los bosques son entidades vivientes", junto con otras declaraciones en apoyo a un ambiente saludable. El Pronunciamiento también afirma que los seres humanos deben comprometerse a cuidar, preservar y respetar los bosques, y promover acciones concretas para su expansión en El Salvador.

"Reconocer a los bosques como entidades vivientes sienta las bases para un nuevo paradigma en El Salvador en el que los seres humanos vivan en armonía con los bosques y los respeten como algo más que una propiedad", dijo el abogado salvadoreño Eneas Wilfredo Martínez Santos. "Sin los bosques naturales prósperos, nuestro planeta no puede mantener a los seres humanos ni a millones de otras especies que dependen de ecosistemas saludables".

Durante el último año, una coalición de líderes ambientales y sociales, incluidos abogados, ingenieros y estudiantes universitarios, han pedido el reconocimiento de los Derechos de la Naturaleza en El Salvador. En los últimos meses, la coalición, Sí por los Derechos de la Naturaleza, se ha centrado en una campaña para reconocer a los bosques como entidades vivientes.

El Salvador ha perdido aproximadamente el 85 por ciento de sus bosques nativos desde la década de 1960, y el planeta en su conjunto ha perdido alrededor del 80 por ciento. Pero en los últimos años, El Salvador se ha comprometido firmemente a restaurar sus paisajes.

"El pronunciamiento de hoy muestra el compromiso de El Salvador con nuevas formas de gobierno que tienen en cuenta las necesidades de los ecosistemas", dijo Grant Wilson, Abogado Director del Earth Law Center. "Esperamos que El Salvador pueda inspirar a muchos otros países a tomar acciones similares".


Sí para los Derechos de la Naturaleza está dedicado a establecer los Derechos de la Naturaleza en El Salvador.

Earth Law Center (www.earthlawcenter.org) trabaja para transformar la ley para reconocer y proteger los derechos inherentes de la Naturaleza a existir, prosperar y evolucionar.

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Pronouncement in El Salvador Deems Forests to be Living Entities

El Salvador’s Legislative Assembly declared that “forests are living entities” on World Environment Day.

Bosque Conchagua in El Salvador (via Wikipedia)

Bosque Conchagua in El Salvador (via Wikipedia)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: June 5, 2019

Contacts:

Ahuachapán, El Salvador: Today, on World Environment Day, the Legislative Assembly of El Salvador approved a pronouncement deeming that “forests are living entities.” The pronouncement also states that each person must commit to caring for, preserving, and respecting forests, and to promoting concrete actions that expand forests in El Salvador. This historic recognition was part of a larger pronouncement in support of a healthy environment.

“Recognizing forests as living entities sets the stage for a new paradigm in El Salvador in which humans live in harmony with forests and respect them as more than just property,” said El Salvadorian lawyer Eneas Wilfredo Martínez Santos. “Without thriving natural forests, our planet cannot support humans nor millions of other species that rely upon healthy ecosystems.”

Over the last year, a coalition of environmental and social leaders—including lawyers, engineers, and university students—have called for recognition of the Rights of Nature in El Salvador. In recent months, the coalition, Yes for the Rights of Nature (“Sí por los Derechos de la Naturaleza”), has focused on a campaign to recognize forests as living entities.

El Salvador has lost about 85 percent of its native forests since the 1960s, and the planet as a whole has lost about 80 percent of its native forests. But in recent years, El Salvador has made a strong commitment to restoring its native landscapes.

“Today’s pronouncement shows El Salvador’s commitment to new forms of governance that consider the needs of ecosystems,” said Grant Wilson, Directing Attorney at Earth Law Center, which has provided legal support on the Rights of Nature in El Salvador. “We hope that El Salvador can inspire many other countries to take similar actions.”


Yes for the Rights of Nature (“Sí por los Derechos de la Naturaleza”) is dedicated to establishing Rights of Nature in El Salvador. Visit https://www.facebook.com/siporlanaturaleza.

Earth Law Center works to transform the law to recognize and protect nature’s inherent rights to exist, thrive and evolve. Visit www.earthlawcenter.org.

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Publisher Confirmed for First Earth Law Legal Textbook

ELC has reached an agreement to publish the first ever law school textbook on Earth Law, entitled Earth Law: Emerging Ecocentric Law.

NASA.gov

NASA.gov

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 22, 2019

Contact: Grant Wilson (gwilson@earthlaw.org), 510-566-1063 Tony Zelle (tzelle@earthlaw.org), 617-388-4782

New York NY – Today, Earth Law Center finalized a contract with Wolters Kluwer Legal & Regulatory, U.S., of the famed “red and black” Aspen Casebook Series, to publish the first ever law school textbook on Earth Law, including the Rights of Nature movement, entitled Earth Law: Emerging Ecocentric Law.

Specific textbook subject matters include an overview of the Rights of Nature movement, human environmental rights, animal rights, the public trust doctrine, Earth Jurisprudence, guardianship of nature, and more. The textbook will feature over twenty leading academics and practitioners in these and other fields.

“Through the textbook, students will understand the dynamic nature of law and develop tools to practice in cutting-edge areas of environmental law and governance,” said Grant Wilson, Directing Attorney of Earth Law Center. “We are thrilled to partner with one of the world’s leading textbook publishers to educate the next generation of environmental lawyers.”

The textbook will be published in 2020 and will be available in the U.S. and internationally. While targeted at law schools, the textbook is also being made available to undergraduate and graduate programs.

“Earth Law can help solve the environmental crisis that threatens the integrity of ecosystems across the globe,” said Tony Zelle, who co-leads the project and serves on Earth Law Center’s Board of Directors. “Ecocentric laws are developing at an increasing pace as courts and legislatures reflect societies’ increasing moral commitment to future generations,” he continued. “This textbook will enable students and professionals to become practitioners in this movement.”

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Environmental Leaders in El Salvador Announce Campaign to Give Legal Rights to Natural Forests

A coalition of environmental and social leaders announced the formation of a group called Yes for the Rights of Nature (“Sí por los Derechos de la Naturaleza”) in El Salvador.

Si a los derechos

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 30, 2019

Contacts: Eneas Wilfredo Martínez Santos (eneaswilfredo@gmail.com, +503 70841322)

Roberto Carlos Olivares Martínez (rocolivares@gmail.com, +503 77962043)

Grant Wilson (gwilson@earthlaw.org, +1 510-566-1063)

Ahuachapán, El Salvador: Today, a coalition of environmental and social leaders—including lawyers, engineers, and university students—announced the formation of a group called Yes for the Rights of Nature (“Sí por los Derechos de la Naturaleza”). The group’s first campaign is to recognize El Salvador’s natural forests as living entities possessing fundamental rights.

Towards this objective, the group released a “Declaration of the Rights of Natural Forests in El Salvador,” which calls upon the national government to adopt a strong commitment to Nature, “beginning with the recognition of natural forests as subjects of rights.” Rights of Nature organization Earth Law Center assisted with the legal drafting.

Recognition of the Rights of Nature is increasing worldwide. In 2008, Ecuador became the first country to constitutionally recognize Nature’s rights. More recently, a 2017 treaty agreement in New Zealand recognized the Whanganui River as “an indivisible and living whole” and “a legal person.” Last year, the Supreme Court of Colombia ruled that the entire Colombian Amazon is a subject of rights.

The proposed Declaration would acknowledge that natural forests are living entities with certain inalienable rights, including rights to life, to integral health, to support native biodiversity, and to independent legal guardianship, amongst others. The proposed amendment also recognizes related human rights, including the right to a healthy and sustainable climate.

“Giving legal rights to El Salvador’s natural forests is a gift, not only to ecosystems and species, but to all of El Salvador, particularly its future generations,” said lawyer Eneas Wilfredo Martínez Santos, one of the proponents of the project. “Without thriving natural forests, our planet cannot support humans nor millions of other species.”

El Salvador has lost about 85 percent of its native forests since the 1960s,[1] and the planet as a whole has lost about 80 percent of its native forests, resulting in the extinction of countless species. Forests support about 80 percent of the world’s land-based species and play a key role in the water cycle, carbon cycle, nutrient cycle, and other key processes that act as the very foundation of life on our planet. 

Yes for the Rights of Nature (“Sí por los Derechos de la Naturaleza”) expressed optimism that governmental authorities in El Salvador will support the proposal considering their recent support of ecosystem restoration. For example, in 2011, El Salvador committed to restoring one million hectares of degraded land by 2020 through the Bonn Challenge global restoration goal. El Salvador is also a leader within Initiative 20x20, which aims to restore and protect deforested and degraded lands across Latin America and the Caribbean.


Yes for the Rights of Nature (“Sí por los Derechos de la Naturaleza”) is dedicated to establishing Rights of Nature in El Salvador.

Earth Law Center (www.earthlawcenter.org) works to transform the law to recognize and protect nature’s inherent rights to exist, thrive and evolve.


[1] Michal Nachmany et al., "Climate Change Legislation in El Salvador," (2015) (citing World Bank statistics).

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Earth Law Center Launches Community Toolkit for Rights of Nature

“Our Toolkit is designed for communities that wish to take bold action in the face of global environmental degradation.” - Grant Wilson, Directing Attorney at ELC.

Community Toolkit

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contacts: Grant Wilson (gwilson@earthlaw.org, 510-566-1063)

New York, NY (March 26, 2019)—Today, Earth Law Center (ELC) announces the launch of a Community Toolkit for Rights of Nature as a free tool for local communities wishing to strengthen their protection of Nature. 

Municipalities across the U.S. have passed ordinances and resolutions that recognize Nature as a legal entity possessing rights, including in Santa Monica, CA and Crestone, CO. These local laws bolster existing ecosystem protections and guide a community towards a stronger, more meaningful relationship with Nature.

As with the abolition of slavery, granting women the right to vote, and the civil rights movement, local governments have been at the forefront of enshrining our expanded ethical considerations into law. So too is true with the Rights of Nature movement, with dozens of communities having recognized that Nature is a subject of rights. By contrast, our current legal and economic paradigms generally treat ecosystems and species as mere property.

“Our Toolkit is designed for communities that wish to take bold action in the face of global environmental degradation,” remarked Grant Wilson, Directing Attorney at Earth Law Center. “The effort to save our planet really begins inside town halls and city council meetings.”

The Rights of Nature movement is rapidly growing both in the U.S. and globally. In addition to Ecuador and Bolivia recognizing Rights of Nature nationally, at least three rivers, a national park, and a sacred mountain have also exercised their fundamental rights (the Whanganui in New Zealand, the Atrato in Colombia, the Vilcabamba in Ecuador, and the Te Urewera protected area and Mt. Taranaki in New Zealand). Last year, a judge in Colombia also declared the entire Colombian Amazon to be a subject of rights. 

The Toolkit was developed with significant input from Marsha Moutrie (former Santa Monica City Attorney) and Myra Jackson (Senior Advisor on Whole Earth Civics and Focal Point on Harmony with Nature with Geoversiv Foundation), who are leading experts in the field.


Earth Law Center (www.earthlawcenter.org) works to transform the law to recognize and protect Nature’s inherent rights to exist, thrive and evolve. This includes advancing the inherent rights of rivers through initiatives with local partners to secure rights recognition.

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