Resumen:
This research tries to understand the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) from the perspective of
social ecology and environmental law, away from the Darwinian theory of man dominating nature and
more focused on rethinking the SDGs from the nature-society co-evaluation in the adaptive sense of
society to the new reality of its physical-natural support and to the new legal system of human rights.
Development with victims from biologically rich countries like Peru with paradoxical poverty is analyzed,
and likewise, the collapse of society in the face of imminent climate change due to human action is
analyzed, which requires climate justice for environmentally displaced people in the face of the violation
of their human rights, especially of children at risk. Finally, a Latin American academic contribution is
presented to rethink the SDGs, generating contributions to the later times of the social confinement of
COVID-19, in the so-called new normal.