Part I: Theoretical Framing. Questions, Approaches, And Cases ; Citizenship Regimes, The State, And Ethnic Cleavages ; The Argument : Indigenous Mobilization In Latin America -- Part II: The Cases. Ecuador : Latin America's Strongest Indigenous Movement. Part I: The Ecuadorian Andes And ECUARUNARI, Part II: The Ecuadorian Amazon And CONFENAIE, Part III: Forming The National Confederation, CONAIE ; Bolivia : Strong Regional Movements. Part I: The Bolivian Andes : The Kataristas And Their Legacy, Part II: The Bolivian Amazon And CIDOB ; Peru : Weak National Movements And Subnational Variation. Part I: Peru, Ecuador, And Bolivia : Most Similar Cases, Part II: No National Indigenous Movements : Explaining The Peruvian Anomaly, Part III: Explaining Subnational Variation -- Part III: Conclusion. Democracy And The Postliberal Challenge In Latin America
Summary
In the twentieth century, indigenous people in Latin America started to speak out, mobilize, and organize in unprecedented ways. This book asks: why are indigenous people mobilizing now and why only in specific places? This book answers these questions with insight into their advancement and reform of democracy
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 309-350) and index