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Opposition or Cooperation? - A Minor Field Study of the Ecuadorian Indigenous Movement´s Relation to the State

Hofmann, Maria LU and Bedia Valenzuela, Edberth LU (2010) STVK01 20101
Department of Political Science
Abstract
Ecuador is one of the countries in Latin America where an indigenous movement has a significant influence on politics. This qualitative study examines the indigenous movement in Ecuador and how it relates to the state, in an analysis departing from theories on social movements. This thesis, emphasizing the indigenous perspective, is based on empirical material collected in a minor field study in Ecuador. The focus is on the regional indigenous organization ECUARUNARI´s agenda, strategies and position towards the actual government. The aim is to contribute to a deeper understanding of how the Ecuadorian indigenous peoples mobilize and relate to the state. The conditions of struggle for the indigenous movement changed as a leftist president,... (More)
Ecuador is one of the countries in Latin America where an indigenous movement has a significant influence on politics. This qualitative study examines the indigenous movement in Ecuador and how it relates to the state, in an analysis departing from theories on social movements. This thesis, emphasizing the indigenous perspective, is based on empirical material collected in a minor field study in Ecuador. The focus is on the regional indigenous organization ECUARUNARI´s agenda, strategies and position towards the actual government. The aim is to contribute to a deeper understanding of how the Ecuadorian indigenous peoples mobilize and relate to the state. The conditions of struggle for the indigenous movement changed as a leftist president, Rafael Correa, assumed office in 2007. Opposite to expectations of co-operation, tensions rapidly arose. The outlined main reasons are differing political projects and visions of the state and political participation. We argue that another aspect of the disagreement is the indigenous movement´s difficulty in adapting to the actual political context. With a collective identity partly based on an anti-system discourse, protest actions and independency, the leadership of the movement continues in the same direction, despite tendencies among the grass roots to support the new government.

Words: 9988 (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Hofmann, Maria LU and Bedia Valenzuela, Edberth LU
supervisor
organization
course
STVK01 20101
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
indigenous, state, social movement, Ecuador
language
English
id
1608277
date added to LUP
2010-06-29 16:00:03
date last changed
2010-06-29 16:00:03
@misc{1608277,
  abstract     = {{Ecuador is one of the countries in Latin America where an indigenous movement has a significant influence on politics. This qualitative study examines the indigenous movement in Ecuador and how it relates to the state, in an analysis departing from theories on social movements. This thesis, emphasizing the indigenous perspective, is based on empirical material collected in a minor field study in Ecuador. The focus is on the regional indigenous organization ECUARUNARI´s agenda, strategies and position towards the actual government. The aim is to contribute to a deeper understanding of how the Ecuadorian indigenous peoples mobilize and relate to the state. The conditions of struggle for the indigenous movement changed as a leftist president, Rafael Correa, assumed office in 2007. Opposite to expectations of co-operation, tensions rapidly arose. The outlined main reasons are differing political projects and visions of the state and political participation. We argue that another aspect of the disagreement is the indigenous movement´s difficulty in adapting to the actual political context. With a collective identity partly based on an anti-system discourse, protest actions and independency, the leadership of the movement continues in the same direction, despite tendencies among the grass roots to support the new government.     

Words: 9988}},
  author       = {{Hofmann, Maria and Bedia Valenzuela, Edberth}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Opposition or Cooperation? - A Minor Field Study of the Ecuadorian Indigenous Movement´s Relation to the State}},
  year         = {{2010}},
}