Abstract Quito’s River Renaissance: Rescuing Our Rivers and Defending Their Rights in the Ecuadorian Andes weaves personal narrative, community practice, and legal innovation to document a citizen-led movement to restore urban rivers – especially the Río San Pedro and its brother, the Machángara. Framed by Ecuador’s 2008 Constitution recognizing the Rights of Nature and the ethic of sumak kawsay (good living), the essay follows the emergence of Colectivo Rescate Río San Pedro and its minga-based model that combines art, ritual, environmental education, and citizen science to remove pollution, recover biodiversity, and rebuild social fabric. We situate local action within national and global jurisprudence, including court decisions affirming rivers as rights-bearing subjects and Quito’s green–blue policy responses, as well as popular mandates to protect key ecosystems. Blending memoir and ethnography, we argue that listening to rivers reorients human–nature relations from extraction to reciprocity, turning ancestral Andean social technologies into contemporary governance tools. Quito’s experience offers a replicable pathway: community rituals of care, allied with enforceable rights, can catalyze ecological repair, public health benefits, and democratic participation in rapidly urbanizing Andean cities.
Madera et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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