Indigenous Territorial Autonomy and Self-Government in the Diverse Americas
An essential work on autonomy and self-governance for scholars of Indigenous politics, Indigenous rights in the Americas, constitutional law, and multicultural citizenship regimes.
Across the Americas, Indigenous and Afro-descendent peoples have demanded autonomy, self-determination, and self-governance. By exerting their collective rights, they have engaged with domestic and international standards on the rights of Indigenous Peoples, implemented full-fledged mechanisms for autonomous governance, and promoted political and constitutional reform aimed at expanding understandings of multicultural citizenship and the plurinational state. Yet these achievements come in conflict with national governments’ adoption of neoliberal economic and neo-extractive policies which advance their interests over those of Indigenous communities.
Available for the first time in English, Indigenous Territorial Autonomy and Self-Government in the Diverse Americas explores current and historical struggles for autonomy within ancestral territories, experiences of self-governance in operation, and presents an overview of achievements, challenges, and threats across three decades. Case studies across Bolivia, Chile, Nicaragua, Peru, Colombia, Mexico, Panama, Ecuador, and Canada provide a detailed discussion of autonomy and self-governance in development and in practice.
Paying special attention to the role of Indigenous peoples’ organizations and activism in pursuing sociopolitical transformation, securing rights, and confronting multiple dynamics of dispossession, this book engages with current debates on Indigenous politics, relationships with national governments and economies, and the multicultural and plurinational state. This book will spark critical reflection on political experience and further exploration of the possibilities of the self-determination of peoples through territorial autonomies.
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Front Matter
Introduction by Miguel González, Araceli Burguete Cal y Mayor, José Marimán, Pablo Ortiz-T. and Ritsuko Funaki
Chapter 1. The Right to Self-determination and Indigenous Peoples: The Continuing Quest for Equality
Chapter 2. The Implementation Gap for Indigenous Peoples’ Rights to Lands and Territories in Latin America (1991–2019)
Chapter 3. Framework Law on Autonomy and Decentralization for Native Indigenous Peasant Autonomies (AIOCs): Autonomous Regulation or Institutional Restriction?
Chapter 4. Indigenous Autonomy in Bolivia: From Great Expectations to Faded Dreams
Chapter 5. The Tragedy of Alal: Regression of Rights in the Nicaraguan Autonomous Regime
Chapter 6. Mapuche Autonomy in Pwelmapu: Confrontation and/ or Political Construction?
Chapter 7. A Future Crossroads in Rebellious and Pandemic Times: National Pluralism and Indigenous Selfgovernment in Chile
Metadata
- isbn978-1-77385-463-2
- publisherUniversity of Calgary Press
- publisher placeCalgary, AB
- restrictionsCC-BY-ND 4.0
- rightsThis Open Access work is published under a creative commons licence.
- rights holderMiguel González et al
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