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Territorialities of power in the Ecuadorian coast
Latorre, Sara

HaupttitelTerritorialities of power in the Ecuadorian coast
Titelzusatzthe politics of an environmentally dispossessed group
AutorLatorre, Sara
Seitenzahl30 S.
Schriftenreihe Working Paper Series / desiguALdades.net ; 23
URL des OriginaldokumentsURL >>
Fachbereich/EinrichtungdesiguALdades.net
Erscheinungsjahr2012
Dokumentepdf-Datei
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Freie SchlagwörterEthnic Politics ; Indigeneity ; Natural resource conflicts
DDC300 Sozialwissenschaften
Dokumententyp/-SammlungenMonographie/Text
Medientyp/FormatText
AbstractIn recent years the Latin American region has become a stage for the emergence of new indigeneities, that is, the organization of new political subjects based on new typologies of indigenous identities that challenge the narrow constructions of indigeneity that require fixed geographic or cultural-racial characteristics. This paper aims to contribute to this growing research and literature as it presents a case study in which an environmentally dispossessed group has implemented a novel ethnic strategy based on the concepts of “ancestrality” and “peoplehood” in order to demand collective mangrove land titles, and thus, gain more control over their natural resources. In particular, it addresses the reasons explaining why the mangrove gatherers’ grassroots movement in Ecuador has declared itself to be the Pueblos Ancestrales del Ecosistema Manglar (Ancient People of the Mangrove Ecosystem). This paper argues that this ecosystem-based ethnic identity responds to a total lack of recognition and valuing of a cultural way of life with nature (mangroves). This case study highlights how current natural resource depletion is pushing novel deployments of indigeneity by the fact that this legal category entails rights to collective land and at the same time highlights the dangers of exclusion resulting from granting collective land titles exclusively in terms of indigeneity.
Inhalt1. Introduction
2. Indigeneity: Contemporary Theoretical Approaches to Ethnic Identity and Ethnic Politics
3. The Ecuadorian Intertidal Coast: Its Mangroves and Inhabitants
4. Background of Shrimp Farming in Ecuador
5. Socio-environmental Transformations and Mangroves
5.1 Phase I: Mangroves as Wastelands and Mangrove Gatherers as “Backwards” People
5.2 Phase II: Mangroves as Biodiversity-rich Ecosystems and Mangrove Gatherers as a Threat
5.3 Phase III: Pilot Resource Management Areas Based on a Participative Approach
5.4 Phase IV: Recognition and Granting of Mangrove Traditional Uses through Stewardships
5.5 Phase V: Mangrove Gatherers’ Self-oppression and the Stewardships as New Enclosures
6. The Politics of an Environmentally Dispossessed Social Group: “Ancient Mangrove People”
7. Conclusions
8. Bibliography
SpracheEnglisch
Rechte Nutzungsbedingungen
Zugriffstatistik
 
Statische URLhttp://edocs.fu-berlin.de/docs/receive/FUDOCS_document_000000013844
Emailcontacto@desigualdades.net
Erstellt am28.06.2012 - 11:30:10
Letzte Änderung15.03.2013 - 17:38:27
 

 
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