000 01996naa a2200265uu 4500
001 5042916213144
003 OSt
005 20190212153120.0
008 150429s2013 xx ||||gr |0|| 0 por d
100 1 _aTOMASELLI, Alexandra
_951994
245 1 0 _aEl derecho a la consulta de los pueblos indígenas en Chile :
_bavances y desafios
260 _aStockholm :
_bInstitute of Latin Amercian Studies, Stockholm University,
_c2013
520 3 _aIn 2008, under the presidency of Michelle Bachelet, the International
520 3 _aLabour Organization (ILO) Convention No.169 was finally ratified by Chile. Its
520 3 _aentry into force the year after particularly fuelled the debate on the right to consultation recognized in article 6 of the Convention 169. This caused different consequences. At legal level, the adoption of a decree was contested by indigenous organizations to reduce the impact of the right to. At administrative level, some regional offices of Comisión Nacional de Desarrollo
520 3 _aIndígena (CONADI) realized some consultations. During the same period, some Court of Appeals started to apply the right to consultation in Amparo cases
520 3 _abrought before the courts by the indigenous communities. Thus, this article
520 3 _atackles how the right to consultation has been recognized and applied in
520 3 _aChile in the last three years (2009-2012) at legal, administrative and jurisprudential level. The legislative framework, administrative acts and regulations, and the most relevant case law in the subject will be thus analyzed and assessed
773 0 8 _tIberoamericana: nordic journal of latin american and caribbean studies
_g43, 1-2, p. 113-144
_dStockholm : Institute of Latin Amercian Studies, Stockholm University, 2013
_xISSN 00468444
_w
856 4 2 _uhttp://www.lai.su.se/polopoly_fs/1.220416.1422464488
_yAcesso
942 _cS
998 _a20150429
_b1621^b
_cFabio
998 _a20160623
_b1231^b
_cAna
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c48355
_d48355
041 _apor