This article initiates a series in which the writer will attempt to summarize the scattered and commonly contradictory material on the present ethnic and linguistic constituency of a number of Latin American countries. It represents some personal investigations in the field and an examination of much of the pertinent literature
This article is the product of research conducted in the frame of FONDECYT Research Initiation proje...
This article provides a general anthropological vision of the “Afro-Chilean” community in the north ...
The study of indigenous migration poses great challenges, because it deals with a population that hi...
This article initiates a series in which the writer will attempt to summarize the scattered and com...
Chile recognizes the existence of Anthropology, but has no formally trained anthropologists, and has...
Languages are not just sets of words. They are powerful tools essential to carry history, traditions...
This research was prompted by the questions 'What is being Chilean?, Who are tile Chileans? Do all t...
In Chile, 6.6% of the population identifies as belonging to an indigenous people.gena, a group chara...
The article notes that regionalist cleavage has been polysemic among the Aymara in Chile since 2010...
The article presents a review of kinship in anthropological studies on indigenous populations at the...
The books under review all deal with the same fundamental phenomenon: mobilization against neolibera...
Latin American indigenous peoples have been not only marginalized and excluded, but also folklorized...
The Marilyn R. Waldman Award for the best undergraduate paper in Comparative Studies, 2019Mapudungun...
The article analyzes the presence of the Bavarian Capuchin missionaries in the Araucanía between 189...
This article describes the history of Chile’s national museums, focusing in particular on their exhi...
This article is the product of research conducted in the frame of FONDECYT Research Initiation proje...
This article provides a general anthropological vision of the “Afro-Chilean” community in the north ...
The study of indigenous migration poses great challenges, because it deals with a population that hi...
This article initiates a series in which the writer will attempt to summarize the scattered and com...
Chile recognizes the existence of Anthropology, but has no formally trained anthropologists, and has...
Languages are not just sets of words. They are powerful tools essential to carry history, traditions...
This research was prompted by the questions 'What is being Chilean?, Who are tile Chileans? Do all t...
In Chile, 6.6% of the population identifies as belonging to an indigenous people.gena, a group chara...
The article notes that regionalist cleavage has been polysemic among the Aymara in Chile since 2010...
The article presents a review of kinship in anthropological studies on indigenous populations at the...
The books under review all deal with the same fundamental phenomenon: mobilization against neolibera...
Latin American indigenous peoples have been not only marginalized and excluded, but also folklorized...
The Marilyn R. Waldman Award for the best undergraduate paper in Comparative Studies, 2019Mapudungun...
The article analyzes the presence of the Bavarian Capuchin missionaries in the Araucanía between 189...
This article describes the history of Chile’s national museums, focusing in particular on their exhi...
This article is the product of research conducted in the frame of FONDECYT Research Initiation proje...
This article provides a general anthropological vision of the “Afro-Chilean” community in the north ...
The study of indigenous migration poses great challenges, because it deals with a population that hi...