Gobernanza local, pueblos indígenas e industrias extractivas Transformaciones y continuidades en América Latina

Edited by Darío Restrepo, Liliana Soler-Gómez Lutzelschwab, Eduardo Toche, and Molvina Zeballos

In an extractive economy, social conflicts arise around demands for a share of the revenues captured by the centralist state, adaptation to activities that transform the landscape and shape the flows of capital and labor, as well as more or less radical resistance to a form of development that strips the population and its authorities of their ethnic, communal, and local autonomy. This publication aims to delve deeper into the specific aspects mentioned above and the relationships and connections that run through them, with the goal of exposing the systemic dynamics of extractive primacy in Latin America over the state, politics, and society.

Zitiervorschlag

Bulletin of the Swiss Society of Americanists. Gobernanza local, pueblos indígenas e industrias extractivas Transformaciones y continuidades en América Latina. La Revista No. 76, 2015