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Mexico has made progress in the creation of a legal framework protecting human rights recognized and guaranteed in its constitutional text, however, it has still been necessary to abolish attitudes of discrimination and cultural assimilation of the indigenous population with the non-indigenous, to avoid the deterioration and disappearance of the cultural richness represented by the indigenous peoples that inhabit the Mexican territory. It is necessary, in addition to elevating to constitutional rank provisions protecting the human rights to culture and the self-determination of peoples, that…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Mexico has made progress in the creation of a legal framework protecting human rights recognized and guaranteed in its constitutional text, however, it has still been necessary to abolish attitudes of discrimination and cultural assimilation of the indigenous population with the non-indigenous, to avoid the deterioration and disappearance of the cultural richness represented by the indigenous peoples that inhabit the Mexican territory. It is necessary, in addition to elevating to constitutional rank provisions protecting the human rights to culture and the self-determination of peoples, that the State implement multiculturalism as a transversal axis within its state organization in order to reinforce the protection of the Mexican cultural heritage and therefore of the cultural heritage of humanity.
Autorenporträt
María Elizabeth López Ledesma from San Luis Potosí, Mexico. Law Degree from the UASLP; Master's and Doctorate in Human Rights, with the degree of Doctor Cum Laude and Extraordinary Doctorate Award from the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid; Master's Degree in Research on the Right to Culture; Title of Expert in Indigenous Peoples.