The court came to the conclusion that environmental damages in the Atrato river had minimal impact on subsistence economies and local fisheries.
FALSE - The Court recognized serious impacts on fisheries and subsistence livelihoods.
Ecological justice theory involves _____ to avoid disrupting ecological cycles.
A) precautionary measures
B) reactive measures
A) precautionary measures
How could the Atrato case reshape environmental governance if implemented effectively?
It could shift governance toward ecosystem-centered decision-making, integrate community stewardship, and strengthen environmental accountability.
What does the Atrato case reveal about the relationship between environmental law and social justice?
Environmental protection is closely tied to protecting community rights, livelihoods, and cultural relationships with ecosystems.
The ruling rejected the idea that nature could possess legal standing in constitutional law
FALSE -The Court claimed that nature can have legal standing, not rejected it
Which caused major environmental damage in the Atrato River basin?
A) Illegal gold mining
B) Tourism development
A) Illegal gold mining
Why might governments support Rights of Nature rulings symbolically but struggle to implement them in practice?
Economic pressures, corruption, institutional weakness, and competing development interests can limit enforcement.
Give one reason why these decisions have fallen short in their implementation.
Legal extractivism that is harmful persists
Their is a lack of dialogue with local communities
The state uses a militarised approach to combat extractivist activities
Punitive measures are not enforced
Rulings have not accounted for context (e.g., armed conflict)
Environmental justice focuses on the distribution of environmental benefits and harms between humans and more-than-humans
FALSE - Environmental justice focuses on the distribution of environmental benefits and harms across humans.
Which environmental governance model is the Atrato River ruling attempting to move away from?
A) A technocratic environmental management system where the state regulates resource extraction but ecosystems remain legally treated as property.
B) A biocultural governance model where ecosystems are recognized as legal subjects and local communities participate as guardians
A) A technocratic environmental management system where the state regulates resource extraction but ecosystems remain legally treated as property.
If illegal mining continues after a Rights of Nature ruling, what does this reveal about the limitations of Earth Law?
Legal recognition alone is insufficient without strong enforcement, political will, and institutional capacity.
Name one of the three interrelated rights of participatory justice
(1) The ability to access relevant information to decision-making, (2) participate in decision making, (3) the ability to defend interests through the judicial system.
The Atrato ruling represents a stronger framework for environmental and ecological justice than the Amazon ruling
TRUE
If environmental justice theory or ecological justice theory is considered over the other, then environmental and ecological justices can become….
A) Imbalanced
B) Balanced
A) Imbalanced
In what ways can these rulings be strengthened to ensure ecological and environmental justice?
Open ended response
Name one reason the Atrato ruling represents a stronger framework for environmental and ecological justice than the Amazon ruling.
The ruling has resulted in greater efforts to collaborate with local communities.
It encourages reviewing all legal development projects, not just illegal mining.
The court recognized the Atrato River as a legal subject primarily to strengthen existing environmental regulations rather than transform legal relationships between humans and nature.
FALSE - The ruling aimed to transform the legal relationship by recognizing nature as a rights-bearing entity.
Which legal idea underpins the guardian model used for rivers?
A) Fiduciary duty
B) Trustee responsibility
A) Fiduciary duty
How does one ensure meaningful participatory justice for nature in law?
Include designated representatives to voice nature's interests, while accounting for nature’s ability to influence decision-making.
Account for other forms of speaking and listening in the legal field.
Name 3–5 environmental or governance problems that led communities to bring the Atrato River case to court.
Illegal gold mining in the river basin
Mercury contamination from mining
Deforestation along the river
Destruction of aquatic ecosystems and biodiversity
Weak government enforcement of environmental laws
Harm to Afro-Colombian and Indigenous livelihoods
Sedimentation and river ecosystem degradation