Chapter 1 Introduction Part 2 I In the Defense of Land Chapter 3 Neither Warriors nor Victims: The Wauja Peacefully Organize to Defend Their Land Chapter 4 Ethnodevelopment and Democratic Consolidation in Chile: The Mapuche Question Part 5 II Indigenous Political Participation Chapter 6 Agrarian Protest and the Indian Movement in the Ecuadorian Highlands Chapter 7 Indians and National Salvation: Placing Ecuador's Indigenous Coup of January 2000 in Historical Perspective Chapter 8 The Emergence of Political Organizations among the Guaraní Indians of Bolivia and Argentina: A Comparative Perspective Chapter 9 Consciousness and Contradiction: Indigenous Peoples and Paraguay's Transition to Democracy Part 10 III Indians and Guerrillas Chapter 11 Villagers at Arms: War and Counterrevolution in the Central-South Andes Chapter 12 Pan-Maya Activism in Guatemala Part 13 IV Indigenous Leaders Speak Out Chapter 14 Marta Silva Vito Guaraní (Brazil) Chapter 15 Davi Kopenawa Yanomami (Brazil) Chapter 16 Luis Macas (Ecuador) Chapter 17 Nina Pacari (Ecuador) Chapter 18 Felipe Quispe Huanca (Bolivia) Chapter 19 R. Marhikewun (Chile) Chapter 20 Slected Bibliography Chapter 21 Internet Sources
Erick D. Langer is professor of history in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. Elena Muñoz works for the International Rescue Committee in New York City and is a student at the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University.
Professor Langer is to be commended for assembling such an
outstanding volume of essays on one of the most important topics in
Latin American studies today. Highly recommended, both for
generalists wishing to better understand these recent developments
and for classroom adoption in courses on anthropology, political
science, and race and ethnicity in Latin America.
*Marc Becker, Truman State University*
The articles [in this work] share a consistent thread that renders
the collection not only remarkably coherent for an edited
collection of this breadth, but also an enjoyable and informative
read. Overall, Langer and Muñoz have presented a volume that
deserves to be read by every researcher who is serious about
contemporary indigenous movement sin the Latin American region.
*Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism*
This timely collection of articles, some previously published, some
coming to press for the first time, reflects the sustained
importance of indigenous movements in Latin America. Erick Langer
has paid particular attention to covering a wide range of
indigenous movements while making his task (and the task of the
reader) one of comparison. Key themes emerge as common threads
throughout the collection, such as indigenous peoples and the
state, territoriality, resistance and rebellion, and identity
politics. The strength here lies not just in the ethnographic
richness of the material presented, but also in the attention paid
to the historical roots of these movements. Contemporary Indigenous
Movements in Latin America is sure to attract a readership well
beyond those interested in this topic, as the theoretical issues
addressed here are relevant to all students of social movements,
state-minority relationships, and ethnic politics.
*Patrick C. Wilson, University of Pittsburgh*
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