For over two decades the US has funded repressive forced coca eradication in Peru, Colombia and Bolivia to reduce the illegal cocaine trade. These policies have never met their stated goals and have generated violence and poverty. In 2006 Bolivia definitively broke with the US anti-narcotics model, replacing the militarized eradication of coca crops with a community-based coca control strategy. The program substantially reduced the coca crop while simultaneously respecting human rights and allowing farmers to diversify their livelihoods. This article outlines the elements of the Bolivian initiative that ensure its continued successful functioning. It explores to what extent this model can be translated to other Andean contexts
In Coca Yes, Cocaine No Thomas Grisaffi traces the political ascent and transformation of the Moveme...
While the United States and Bolivian cultures have different values, attitudes and norms, these diff...
For decades, Colombian governments have imposed a narrative linking illegal crops with statelessness...
For over two decades the US has funded repressive forced coca eradication in Peru, Colombia and Boli...
For over two decades the US has funded repressive forced coca eradication in Peru, Colombia and Boli...
For over three decades a central element of US anti-drug policy in the Andean region has been the ag...
Between 2006-2019, Bolivia emerged as a world leader in formulating a participatory, non-violent mod...
On coming to power in 2006 President Morales made a radical break with the US backed anti-drugs stra...
In Bolivia’s Chapare coca growing region, the union structure (sindicato) is the cornerstone of soci...
Since the adoption of Law 1008 in 1988, Bolivia\u27s government has organized a campaign to eradicat...
The implementation of anti-drug policies that focus on illicit crops in the Andean countries faces ...
ABSTRACT The political battle rages between the U.S. government, the U.N. and the Bolivian President...
The implementation of President George H. W. Bush's 1989 Andean Initiative brought to the fore compe...
For three decades, the U.S. has attempted to impose a neoliberal economic model of free markets, tra...
En Bolivie et au Pérou, les régions de production de coca, principales cibles des politiques de lutt...
In Coca Yes, Cocaine No Thomas Grisaffi traces the political ascent and transformation of the Moveme...
While the United States and Bolivian cultures have different values, attitudes and norms, these diff...
For decades, Colombian governments have imposed a narrative linking illegal crops with statelessness...
For over two decades the US has funded repressive forced coca eradication in Peru, Colombia and Boli...
For over two decades the US has funded repressive forced coca eradication in Peru, Colombia and Boli...
For over three decades a central element of US anti-drug policy in the Andean region has been the ag...
Between 2006-2019, Bolivia emerged as a world leader in formulating a participatory, non-violent mod...
On coming to power in 2006 President Morales made a radical break with the US backed anti-drugs stra...
In Bolivia’s Chapare coca growing region, the union structure (sindicato) is the cornerstone of soci...
Since the adoption of Law 1008 in 1988, Bolivia\u27s government has organized a campaign to eradicat...
The implementation of anti-drug policies that focus on illicit crops in the Andean countries faces ...
ABSTRACT The political battle rages between the U.S. government, the U.N. and the Bolivian President...
The implementation of President George H. W. Bush's 1989 Andean Initiative brought to the fore compe...
For three decades, the U.S. has attempted to impose a neoliberal economic model of free markets, tra...
En Bolivie et au Pérou, les régions de production de coca, principales cibles des politiques de lutt...
In Coca Yes, Cocaine No Thomas Grisaffi traces the political ascent and transformation of the Moveme...
While the United States and Bolivian cultures have different values, attitudes and norms, these diff...
For decades, Colombian governments have imposed a narrative linking illegal crops with statelessness...