Elemental analysis in energy integration among nations in the framework of the new generation of international energy law

Authors

  • Claudia Balderrama Programa de Doctorado en Energía y Desarrollo, Universidad Mayor de San Simón
  • Vinícius Oliveira Grupo de Energia do Departamento de Engenharia de Energia e Automação Elétricas da Escola Politécnica da Universidade de São Paulo
  • Renán Orellana Programa de Doctorado en Energía y Desarrollo, Universidad Mayor de San Simón
  • Miguel Morales Grupo de Energia do Departamento de Engenharia de Energia e Automação Elétricas da Escola Politécnica da Universidade de São Paulo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35004/raep.v9i1.154

Keywords:

Energy integration, Energy planning, Fifth generation rights, Legal security, Regulatory foundations

Abstract

The aim of this paper was to show the actions and the implications of energy and politics, starting from the analysis of the governance of supranational policies, in the current context, for the search for structural and regulatory reforms, with economic, environmental, climatic, legal sustainability, social and political. The work developed a systematic study of energy integration in Latin America, focusing on the materials and laws related to the member countries and to the existing supranational organizations that work in the region. It is more that they must be addressed from the local level and then structure the regional platform, from the juridical-political framework of regional integration and vice versa, as a prerequisite for the sustainability of the EI, where the regulatory foundations of each country constitute instruments of cohesion and catalyzing EI. Considering the new scenario of “emerging human rights”, fifth generation as “energy security” in the context of International Energy Right.

Published

2019-07-15

How to Cite

Balderrama, Claudia, Vinícius Oliveira, Renán Orellana, and Miguel Morales. 2019. “Elemental Analysis in Energy Integration Among Nations in the Framework of the New Generation of International Energy Law”. Andean Journal of Political Studies 9 (1):26-45. https://doi.org/10.35004/raep.v9i1.154.