Tesis
Direito à participação pública indígena no aproveitamento hidrelétrico de Belo Monte
Fecha
2013-02-19Registro en:
BACOVIS, Maria Cristina Martins de Figueiredo. Direito à participação pública indígena no aproveitamento hidrelétrico de Belo Monte. 2013. 113 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Direito Agroambiental) - Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso, Faculdade de Direito, Cuiabá, 2013.
Autor
Girard, Pierre
Irigaray, Carlos Teodoro José Hugueney
http://lattes.cnpq.br/5563960646899699
http://lattes.cnpq.br/0442161398765567
Girard, Pierre
257.926.348-90
http://lattes.cnpq.br/0442161398765567
Irigaray, Carlos Teodoro José Hugueney
142.793.471-15
http://lattes.cnpq.br/5563960646899699
257.926.348-90
142.793.471-15
Ribas, Lídia Maria
108.936.361-34
http://lattes.cnpq.br/6871754362505452
Institución
Resumen
The proposed of Belo Monte hydroelectric use, on the Xingu River in the
Pará state, is a priority in the Accelerated Growth Plan of the Brazilian
federal government and when completed will be the third largest dam in the
world. Positions assumed in our country, about the construction of Belo
Monte, are diametrically opposed and that has caused a series of legal and
administrative discussions. A project of this proportion takes to the
discussion of public participation in environmental licensing processes of
large enterprises. In this context, this thesis has as its object the study of
public participation of indigenous peoples in the Belo Monte hydroelectric
implementation process. The use of the hypothetical-deductive approach
promoted the object of study, enabling the achievement of the general
objective of the research, which is to situate and understand the level of
public participation of indigenous peoples in the implementation of the Belo
Monte project. For the development of the dissertation it was used the
bibliographic and documentary research as technical procedure. The
thematic development directed to the analysis of the ILO 169 Convention,
which recognizes the right of indigenous and tribal peoples to be free and
informed consulted before decisions affecting their rights be deliberate. The
research is structured on the following categories of analysis: human rights,
social and environmental impacts and public participation, highlighting
indigenous participation as a fundamental human right, seeking to broaden
the debate on current and controversial issue, as is the Belo Monte
hydroelectric. This work is divided into three sections: The Recognition of
indigenous rights, The Belo Monte concerns and The Public participation in
Belo Monte hydroelectric, which identifies the major conceptual elements
of public participation, clarifies the public hearings and discusses the
indigenous peoples trajectory in the struggle for their rights recognition,
especially their (non) participation in the implementation of Belo Monte.
The present research found that the Belo Monte Hydroelectric is being built,
even without indigenous participation in its implementation, and other
government actions are being taken in order to reduce the rights of
indigenous peoples to their lands.