PROTOCOLO PARA LA CONSULTA Y CONSENTIMIENTO PREVIO SUAREZ BUENOS AIRES CAUCA
PROTOCOLO CP Y CPLI DEL PUEBLO NASA CERRO TIJERAS
PROTOCOLO BUENAVENTURA
PROTOCOLO AUTONOMO PUEBLO ARHUACO
Nino Izquierdo Diapositivas 19012018
Nasa / Paez
- Population (estimate, min)
- 186000
- Country
- Colombia
- Image
- Description
The Páez people, also known as the Nasa, are a Native American people who live in the southwestern highlands of Colombia, especially in the Cauca Department, but also the Caquetá Department lowlands and Tierradentro Wikipedia
Constitutional Court of Columbia
- Country
- Colombia
- Description
The Constitutional Court of Colombia (Spanish: Corte Constitucional de Colombia) is the supreme constitutional court of Colombia. Part of the Judiciary, it is the final appellate court for matters involving interpretation of the Constitution with the power to determine the constitutionality of laws, acts, and statutes.
The court was first established by the Constitution of 1991, and its first session began in March 1992. The court is housed within the shared judicial complex of the Palace of Justice located on the north side of Bolívar Square in the La Candelaria neighbourhood of Bogotá.
The Constitutional Court consists of nine magistrates who are elected by the Senate of Colombia from ternary lists drawn up by the President, the Supreme Court of Justice, and the Council of State. The magistrates serve for a term of eight years. The court is headed by a President and Vice President.
Const Court ruling T 530 16
- Date
- Dec 27, 2016
- issued by
Bio cultural protocol ASOCASAN 2012
Arhuaco
- Population (estimate, min)
- 30000
- Country
- Colombia
- Image
- Description
The Arhuaco are an indigenous people of Colombia. They are Chibchan-speaking people and descendants of the Tairona culture, concentrated in northern Colombia in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta. Wikipedia
Amerindian Peoples Assiciation
- Logo
- Country
- Argentina
- Bolivia
- Brasil
- Chile
- Colombia
- Equador
- French Guyana
- Guyana
- Peru
- Surinam
- Description
The Amerindian Peoples Association (APA) is a non-governmental Indigenous Peoples organization in Guyana.
Membership of the APA is made up of Units throughout the country, currently amounting to close to eighty such units. The Association is led by an Executive Committee comprising the President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, Assistant Secretary/Treasurer, eleven regional representatives, a women’s representative and a youth representative.
The APA has a central office in Georgetown which is staffed by persons from interior communities who carry out the daily functions of the organization and who provides the link between what is happening in the communities and what is happening at the national and international levels.
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