RUIZ-RESTREPO’S ILLUSTRATED THEORY OF CHANGE: THE CIVISOL CASE ON WASTE SANITATION AS AN INCLUSIVE PUBLIC UTILITY SERVICE , London, 2017 Copyright // Spanish: RUIZ-RESTREPO TEORIA DE CAMBIO ILUSTRADA: EL CASO CIVISOL SOBRE ASEO DE RESIDUOS COMO UN SERVICIO PUBLICO INCLUSIVO
Detailed Support Material London, September 2017
Document for understanding the history of urban cleanliness or city sanitation; the legitimate potential of Not-for-Profit and/or Non-Governmental Organizations (NPOs/NGOs)for poverty reduction; the tolerated misuse and abuse of this subuniverse or set of legal entities or the Third Sector; the theory of Systemic Change of Ruiz-Restrepo, and the strategic litigation process successfully raised in front of the Constitutional Court by Colombian lawyers and defenders of poverty-trapped waste pickers, their visionary social leaders and adjudicated by justices of the progressive Colombian Constitutional. Rulings then irradiated by jurisprudential migration and global public policy to other jurisdictions of the Global South.
These drawings are also an illustrated storytelling of the intent and purpose, of the scope,of the Special Measures of Inclusion petitioned by civil society and then granted by the Court as an affirmative action of the socioeconomic human rights of waste pickers by trade and for survival recognizing them, constitutionally as entrepreneurs in their own right and thus municipal recycling service providers protected under a formal city contract and retributed also by the waste fee paid by all citizens to the City in the public utilities invoice or tax to sanitize and clean the surface of the municipality and secure a healthy environment and home.
This illustrated narrative contains 105 sequential drawings for storytelling juristic concepts and legal decisions. Including the measures of special inclusion in formal public law, policy, regulation, and contracting requested in Court and adjudicated through rulings T-724/03, C-741/03, T-291/09, C-793/09 between 2002 and 2009 and thereafter through orders in supervisory decisions A-180/10 A-183/10, A-268/10, A-355/ 10, A-275/11, A-118/2014.
It aims to explain the tension existing -chiefly in the Global South cities- between, the public law of municipal waste management on one hand as it pertains to the creation and operation of an integral system of domestic/household Waste Collection/removal for the ending of waste, i.e. sanitary risk inherent to all material refuse, waste, garbage or trashed things and objects and the constitutional duty of any National State and its Government of securing and preserving City Sanitation across its jurisdiction understood as a duty to secure a healthy human environment and thus atmosphere i.e. an on-increasingly warming temperature or climate. A tension that, has, on the other hand or pole of interest, the economic forces of globalization and a new sort or covert surface mining for the extraction of commodity materials from the cities´ urban waste streams and for the supply chain of the productive industry of goods and their packaging and bottling connected industries.
In sum, this illustrated -legal- storytelling and its evidence (also online published) is an effort to compile and explain as simply as possible the intense complexity and opacity of the state of things regarding poverty, sanitation, waste and industrial globalization.
It seeks to shed light on the tension between public administrative law (hard law) and private social labels of virtuosity and trendy agendas (soft law) steering the rule of law away from justiciable rights and the legal security of rulings and their "res judicata" effects. And expose or better unearth the newly emerging extractive industry and business of extraction and trading with the trash currently deployed under the pretext of global warming mitigation and circular economy effort that in so far as waste goes isn´t traceable less yet verifiable despite the celebrated full recycling or zero-waste agenda.
This agenda of massive and transnational extraction of commodities from the cities of the world and their urban waste streams is inconceivable for the Global north where individuals dump diving and recycling is entirely prohibit
Detailed Support Material London, September 2017
Document for understanding the history of urban cleanliness or city sanitation; the legitimate potential of Not-for-Profit and/or Non-Governmental Organizations (NPOs/NGOs)for poverty reduction; the tolerated misuse and abuse of this subuniverse or set of legal entities or the Third Sector; the theory of Systemic Change of Ruiz-Restrepo, and the strategic litigation process successfully raised in front of the Constitutional Court by Colombian lawyers and defenders of poverty-trapped waste pickers, their visionary social leaders and adjudicated by justices of the progressive Colombian Constitutional. Rulings then irradiated by jurisprudential migration and global public policy to other jurisdictions of the Global South.
These drawings are also an illustrated storytelling of the intent and purpose, of the scope,of the Special Measures of Inclusion petitioned by civil society and then granted by the Court as an affirmative action of the socioeconomic human rights of waste pickers by trade and for survival recognizing them, constitutionally as entrepreneurs in their own right and thus municipal recycling service providers protected under a formal city contract and retributed also by the waste fee paid by all citizens to the City in the public utilities invoice or tax to sanitize and clean the surface of the municipality and secure a healthy environment and home.
This illustrated narrative contains 105 sequential drawings for storytelling juristic concepts and legal decisions. Including the measures of special inclusion in formal public law, policy, regulation, and contracting requested in Court and adjudicated through rulings T-724/03, C-741/03, T-291/09, C-793/09 between 2002 and 2009 and thereafter through orders in supervisory decisions A-180/10 A-183/10, A-268/10, A-355/ 10, A-275/11, A-118/2014.
It aims to explain the tension existing -chiefly in the Global South cities- between, the public law of municipal waste management on one hand as it pertains to the creation and operation of an integral system of domestic/household Waste Collection/removal for the ending of waste, i.e. sanitary risk inherent to all material refuse, waste, garbage or trashed things and objects and the constitutional duty of any National State and its Government of securing and preserving City Sanitation across its jurisdiction understood as a duty to secure a healthy human environment and thus atmosphere i.e. an on-increasingly warming temperature or climate. A tension that, has, on the other hand or pole of interest, the economic forces of globalization and a new sort or covert surface mining for the extraction of commodity materials from the cities´ urban waste streams and for the supply chain of the productive industry of goods and their packaging and bottling connected industries.
In sum, this illustrated -legal- storytelling and its evidence (also online published) is an effort to compile and explain as simply as possible the intense complexity and opacity of the state of things regarding poverty, sanitation, waste and industrial globalization.
It seeks to shed light on the tension between public administrative law (hard law) and private social labels of virtuosity and trendy agendas (soft law) steering the rule of law away from justiciable rights and the legal security of rulings and their "res judicata" effects. And expose or better unearth the newly emerging extractive industry and business of extraction and trading with the trash currently deployed under the pretext of global warming mitigation and circular economy effort that in so far as waste goes isn´t traceable less yet verifiable despite the celebrated full recycling or zero-waste agenda.
This agenda of massive and transnational extraction of commodities from the cities of the world and their urban waste streams is inconceivable for the Global north where individuals dump diving and recycling is entirely prohibit
RUIZ-RESTREPO’S ILLUSTRATED THEORY OF CHANGE: THE CIVISOL CASE ON WASTE SANITATION AS AN INCLUSIVE PUBLIC UTILITY SERVICE , London, 2017 Copyright // Spanish: RUIZ-RESTREPO TEORIA DE CAMBIO ILUSTRADA: EL CASO CIVISOL SOBRE ASEO DE RESIDUOS COMO UN SERVICIO PUBLICO INCLUSIVO
Detailed Support Material London, September 2017
Document for understanding the history of urban cleanliness or city sanitation; the legitimate potential of Not-for-Profit and/or Non-Governmental Organizations (NPOs/NGOs)for poverty reduction; the tolerated misuse and abuse of this subuniverse or set of legal entities or the Third Sector; the theory of Systemic Change of Ruiz-Restrepo, and the strategic litigation process successfully raised in front of the Constitutional Court by Colombian lawyers and defenders of poverty-trapped waste pickers, their visionary social leaders and adjudicated by justices of the progressive Colombian Constitutional. Rulings then irradiated by jurisprudential migration and global public policy to other jurisdictions of the Global South.
These drawings are also an illustrated storytelling of the intent and purpose, of the scope,of the Special Measures of Inclusion petitioned by civil society and then granted by the Court as an affirmative action of the socioeconomic human rights of waste pickers by trade and for survival recognizing them, constitutionally as entrepreneurs in their own right and thus municipal recycling service providers protected under a formal city contract and retributed also by the waste fee paid by all citizens to the City in the public utilities invoice or tax to sanitize and clean the surface of the municipality and secure a healthy environment and home.
This illustrated narrative contains 105 sequential drawings for storytelling juristic concepts and legal decisions. Including the measures of special inclusion in formal public law, policy, regulation, and contracting requested in Court and adjudicated through rulings T-724/03, C-741/03, T-291/09, C-793/09 between 2002 and 2009 and thereafter through orders in supervisory decisions A-180/10 A-183/10, A-268/10, A-355/ 10, A-275/11, A-118/2014.
It aims to explain the tension existing -chiefly in the Global South cities- between, the public law of municipal waste management on one hand as it pertains to the creation and operation of an integral system of domestic/household Waste Collection/removal for the ending of waste, i.e. sanitary risk inherent to all material refuse, waste, garbage or trashed things and objects and the constitutional duty of any National State and its Government of securing and preserving City Sanitation across its jurisdiction understood as a duty to secure a healthy human environment and thus atmosphere i.e. an on-increasingly warming temperature or climate. A tension that, has, on the other hand or pole of interest, the economic forces of globalization and a new sort or covert surface mining for the extraction of commodity materials from the cities´ urban waste streams and for the supply chain of the productive industry of goods and their packaging and bottling connected industries.
In sum, this illustrated -legal- storytelling and its evidence (also online published) is an effort to compile and explain as simply as possible the intense complexity and opacity of the state of things regarding poverty, sanitation, waste and industrial globalization.
It seeks to shed light on the tension between public administrative law (hard law) and private social labels of virtuosity and trendy agendas (soft law) steering the rule of law away from justiciable rights and the legal security of rulings and their "res judicata" effects. And expose or better unearth the newly emerging extractive industry and business of extraction and trading with the trash currently deployed under the pretext of global warming mitigation and circular economy effort that in so far as waste goes isn´t traceable less yet verifiable despite the celebrated full recycling or zero-waste agenda.
This agenda of massive and transnational extraction of commodities from the cities of the world and their urban waste streams is inconceivable for the Global north where individuals dump diving and recycling is entirely prohibit
RUIZ-RESTREPO’S ILLUSTRATED THEORY OF CHANGE: THE CIVISOL CASE ON WASTE SANITATION AS AN INCLUSIVE PUBLIC UTILITY SERVICE , London, 2017 Copyright . (Spanish RUIZ-RESTREPO TEORIA DE CAMBIO ILUSTRADA: EL CASO CIVISOL SOBRE ASEO DE RESIDUOS COMO UN SERVICIO PUBLICO INCLUSIVO)
Borrador/ Wiego Global Rec (Globalization of Waste Pickers and Oh.. Global Waste Commodities) Intensely Orienting The Crafting of Domestic Rule (And Interpretation) of Law and Polity