In Bolivia, national reforms of the Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) government, which purport to devolve power to indigenous communities, generated disagreement among the local authorities of the highland indigenous community of Bolívar province. This paper examines why this conflict occurred and how it illustrates some of the paradoxical consequences of the MAS’ project of ‘plurinational’ reform. This situation can be explained through understanding the legacy of administrative and territorial reforms of Bolivia’s ‘neoliberal’ period and how these have shaped the local system of government and the perspectives of its leaders
Over the last two decades Latin America has been a laboratory for the implementation of new models o...
This paper critiques common depictions of the Evo Morales government in Bolivia as revolutionary soc...
Bolivia, like many countries in Latin America, experienced revolutionary movements that changed the ...
Scholars have long observed that institutions and power relations are cyclically constitutive, as in...
Agrarian reforms do not constitute linear processes: rather, they are based on the interconnection b...
Since the entry into force of the new Constitution (January 2009), Bolivia has experienced important...
Over the last two decades Latin America has been a laboratory for the implementation of new models o...
Evo Morales and the MAS came to power in 2006 promising fundamental social, cultural, economic and p...
Based on long-term ethnographic fieldwork in rural and urban areas of Bolivia, this thesis examines ...
The adoption of Bolivia's new political Constitution in 2009 marked the birth of a new plurinational...
Bolivia seems to be moving toward the integration of indigenous territories into the institutional, ...
In the past several decades, social movements have spread all across Latin America, sparking hope fo...
This dissertation is a study of the tensions between the Movement Toward Socialism (MAS) political p...
On 20 November 2016, residents of Gran Chaco Province in south-east Bolivia voted by popular referen...
This thesis explores decentralisation in the context of the emergence of indigenous peasant movement...
Over the last two decades Latin America has been a laboratory for the implementation of new models o...
This paper critiques common depictions of the Evo Morales government in Bolivia as revolutionary soc...
Bolivia, like many countries in Latin America, experienced revolutionary movements that changed the ...
Scholars have long observed that institutions and power relations are cyclically constitutive, as in...
Agrarian reforms do not constitute linear processes: rather, they are based on the interconnection b...
Since the entry into force of the new Constitution (January 2009), Bolivia has experienced important...
Over the last two decades Latin America has been a laboratory for the implementation of new models o...
Evo Morales and the MAS came to power in 2006 promising fundamental social, cultural, economic and p...
Based on long-term ethnographic fieldwork in rural and urban areas of Bolivia, this thesis examines ...
The adoption of Bolivia's new political Constitution in 2009 marked the birth of a new plurinational...
Bolivia seems to be moving toward the integration of indigenous territories into the institutional, ...
In the past several decades, social movements have spread all across Latin America, sparking hope fo...
This dissertation is a study of the tensions between the Movement Toward Socialism (MAS) political p...
On 20 November 2016, residents of Gran Chaco Province in south-east Bolivia voted by popular referen...
This thesis explores decentralisation in the context of the emergence of indigenous peasant movement...
Over the last two decades Latin America has been a laboratory for the implementation of new models o...
This paper critiques common depictions of the Evo Morales government in Bolivia as revolutionary soc...
Bolivia, like many countries in Latin America, experienced revolutionary movements that changed the ...