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The Impact of Indigenous Movements in Latin America: A Work in Progress

The Impact of Indigenous Movements in Latin America: A Work in Progress. Clara Bensen: Department of International Studies College of Arts and Sciences Honors College Mentor - Emile Sahliyeh Ph.D.: Director of the International Studies Major Department of International Studies.

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The Impact of Indigenous Movements in Latin America: A Work in Progress

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  1. The Impact of Indigenous Movements in Latin America: A Work in Progress Clara Bensen: Department of International Studies College of Arts and Sciences Honors College Mentor - Emile Sahliyeh Ph.D.: Director of the International Studies Major Department of International Studies

  2. Motivation for Study • Indigenous peoples only make up 5% of the world’s population, but constitute 15% of the world’s poor. • Typically, indigenous groups have higher rates of poverty and malnutrition, less access to education and health services, less political representation and tenuous control over their land. • In Latin America, the gap between indigenous and non-indigenous groups is increasing. • Raising the level of equality of indigenous people could potentially result in a significant increase in the national economies of Bolivia (by 37%), Brazil (by 13%), Guatemala (by 14%) and Peru (by 5%). Statistics courtesy of: The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) and the World Bank (WB)

  3. Background • Emergence of Latin American indigenous groups over the last 20 years. • Results are debatable: some scholars see negative trends, others have a positive outlook.

  4. Abstract This paper seeks to: • Identify and sample. • Gather and analyze data. • Ascertain what factors are affected.

  5. Research Focus • How are indigenous leaders and groups portrayed in Western media? In comparison, how are non-indigenous leaders portrayed?

  6. Research Focus • How do the traditional socio-cultural values of indigenous people (family, community, relationship with land) translate through an indigenous leader or group in the context of a modern political structure (Western, nation-state, capitalist)?

  7. Research Focus • Do indigenous people fare better in countries where the percentage of indigenous individuals as a part of the whole population is higher? Do these countries have higher indigenous representation?

  8. Research Focus • When an indigenous individual is a leader of a nation, what are the ramifications for the indigenous peoples inside that nation?

  9. Methodology

  10. References Eaton, Kent (2007). Backlash in bolivia: regional autonomy as a reaction against indigenous mobilization. Politics and Society. 35, 71-102. Goodale, Mark (2006). Reclaiming modernity: indigenous cosmopolitanism and the coming of the second revolution in Bolivia. American Ethnologist. 33, No. 4,634-649 Gillete Hall and Harry Anthony Patrinos, Indigenous peoples, poverty and human development in latin america. 1994-2004 (MacMillan, forthcoming). IFAD, (2009) Indigenous peoples. Retrieved March 24, 2009, from http://www.ifad.org/english/indigenous/index.htm#1 Korovkin, Tanya (2001). Reinventing the communal tradition: indigenous peoples, civil society, and democratization in andean ecuador. Latin American Research Review. 36. No. 3, 37-67. Madrid, Raúl (2005). Indigenous Parties and Democracy in Latin America. Latin American Politics and Society. 47, 161-179

  11. Acknowledgements Thanks to: • Emile Sahliyeh, Ph.D. Director, International Studies Major • Jonathan Hook, Ph.D., Director, International Indigenous and American Indian Initiatives • Susan Eve, Ph.D., Associate Dean of the Honors College • Andrea Kirk, Ph.D., Lecturer, Honors College • Gloria Cox, Ph.D., Dean of the Honors College • Warren Burggreen, Ph.D., Dean of Arts and Sciences • Wendy Wilkins, Ph.D., Provost and V.P. of Academic Affairs • Gretchen Bataille, Ph.D., President of the University of North Texas

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