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What is Common Goods

Innovations in Environmental Legislation and Justice: Environmental and Water-Energy-Food Nexus Laws
Refers to those goods that are neither public nor private property, but belong to the entire community. They are assets that nature has made common to all people, such as water, air, the sea, riverbanks and ecosystem functions. “Being common prevents them from being sold or appropriated by the State or private, and recognizes everyone's right to access them to satisfy their fundamental rights and to participate in their governance,” explains Ezio Costa, lawyer and director FIMA executive.
Published in Chapter:
Environmental Law and Green Constitutions
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-6684-7188-3.ch013
Abstract
The general theory of environmental orthodoxy is based on the idea that by introducing the issue of the environment and the need to protect and protect it in the constitution as a reference norm, we will see the establishment of the legal order in this field. In this chapter, an attempt has been made to analyze the content of the constitutions of Latin America in the context of environmental issues and the conservation of natural resources with a comparative approach and as an example. The basic hypothesis of this chapter is based on the fact that today, paying attention to the issue of the environment at the level of constitutions means following sub-norms and the legal system from the norm of reference and the effects that this right can have in the legal system. This is well reflected in the constitutions of Latin America.
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