“BETWEEN REMAINS AND TRIBALS, WE ARE QUILOMBOLS!” – AUTONOMOUS PROTOCOLS FOR CONSULTATION AND PRIOR CONSENT AND THE RIGHT TO FREE DETERMINATION OF QUILOMBOS IN BRAZIL.
MAROONS; CONVENTION 169; PRIOR CONSULTATION; CONSTITUTIONALISM; CONSTITUTIONAL SUBJECTS.
This thesis aims to analyze how the experiences of elaborating consultation protocols and prior, free and informed consent by quilombola communities reframe the fundamental right of free determination of quilombos in Brazil. To do so, we will seek to characterize the re-semanticization of the Quilombo as an identity and Ladino constitutional subject throughout the trajectory of Brazilian constitutionalism. In addition to demonstrating the dynamics of standardization, implementation and creative appropriation of ILO Convention 169 by quilombola, X 2 indigenous and traditional communities in Latin America, and particularly in Brazil, in their processes of struggle to guarantee the right to consultation and prior, free and informed. Finally, to identify how the experiences of elaboration of autonomous protocols by quilombola communities support new constituent narratives about the right to live-determination of quilombos in Brazil from the constitutional writings that vocalize.