Abstract

In this paper we compare recent efforts towards the constitutionalization of the right to water in Brazil, Colombia, and Peru to understand the opportunities and limitations related to the attempts to enhance access to piped water to the highest normative level. Peru passed a constitutional amendment in 2017 while Brazil and Colombia have seen much right-to-water activism but have not succeeded in passing such reforms. We explore the role of the existing domestic legal frameworks on drinkable water provision and water management towards the approval of constitutional amendments. We find that all three countries have specialized laws, water governing institutions, and constitutional jurisprudence connecting access to water with rights, but the legal opportunity structures to enforce socio-economic rights vary; they are stronger in Colombia and Brazil, and weaker in Peru. We argue that legal opportunity structures build legal environments that influence constitutional reform success. Legal opportunity structures act as incentives both for social movements to push for reforms and for actors with legislative power to accept or reject them. Our findings also show that in some contexts political cost is a key element of constitutional reforms that enshrine the right to water; therefore, this is an element that should be considered when analyzing these processes.

Highlights

  • This paper provides a comparative analysis of constitutional reform attempts in Brazil, Colombia, and Peru for the inclusion of the right to water

  • To explore the dynamics lying behind attempts to introduce constitutional reforms enshrining the right to water we focused on three cases: Brazil, Colombia, and Peru

  • Social movements have pushed for legal reform to enshrine this right in the constitutions of Brazil, Colombia, and Peru, with diverse results

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Summary

Introduction

This paper provides a comparative analysis of constitutional reform attempts in Brazil, Colombia, and Peru for the inclusion of the right to water. While in Peru the constitutional reform was led by political parties in Congress, in Brazil and Colombia social movements have promoted initiatives towards enshrining the right to water but have run into governmental and legislative hurdles that have not been overcome. These different outcomes are puzzling when considering that Peru—relative to the other two countries—has the weakest constitutional protection of economic, social, and cultural rights (ESCR) and that constitutional reforms are much less frequent there.

The Legal Status of the Right to Water in Latin America
Materials and Methods
Constitutions
Institutions and Service Providers
Judicial Protection and Enforcement of Water Rights
Procedures for Constitutional Reforms per Country
Findings
Attempts to Reform the Constitution per Country
Conclusions
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