A growing body of literature has argued for the reconceptualization of Latin America as a settler colony. Contrary to the self-proclaimed decolonization of Latin American states upon their independence two centuries ago, the settlers who came to Latin America stayed and preserved the structure of settler colonialism to the present day. This article analyzes the case of Nicaragua through the conceptual frame of settler colonialism and examines an apt case study: the Indigenous and Afrodescendant communities of the Rama-Kriol Territory in southeastern Nicaragua, where I have conducted activist ethnographic research since 2014. The ongoing colonization of the Rama-Kriol Territory exhibits not only failures of the state to enforce legal protect...
As a colonial model of organizing power, the nation-state has allowed the construction of a relation...
In recent years, child migrants from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador have made the perilous jour...
Mestizos have lived on Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast since at least 1894 and been the majority group s...
A growing body of literature has argued for the reconceptualization of Latin America as a settler co...
Thesis (Ph.D.), School of Politics, Philosophy, and Public Affairs, Washington State UniversityOn th...
The struggle for autonomy and multicultural governance, in both rich and poor countries alike, is ri...
Weaving together cultural, political economic, and ethnographic analysis, and based upon 3.5 years o...
textIn this investigation I discuss power relations between agricultural frontier colonists and the ...
The history of modern Nicaragua is populated with leaders promising a new and better day. Inevitably...
This article discusses the emergence of demands for regional autonomy amongst the Miskitu inhabitant...
textThis dissertation explores how afro-descendent Creoles from the Atlantic Coast of Nicaragua eng...
This article explores the politics, discursive utterances and postures of an under-studied indigenou...
In recent years, child migrants from Central America have arrived in the United States in unpreceden...
This article examines some of the negative impacts of ethnic self-regulation on the processes of dem...
The following article continues ALB\u27s comparative examination of the struggles of other indigenou...
As a colonial model of organizing power, the nation-state has allowed the construction of a relation...
In recent years, child migrants from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador have made the perilous jour...
Mestizos have lived on Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast since at least 1894 and been the majority group s...
A growing body of literature has argued for the reconceptualization of Latin America as a settler co...
Thesis (Ph.D.), School of Politics, Philosophy, and Public Affairs, Washington State UniversityOn th...
The struggle for autonomy and multicultural governance, in both rich and poor countries alike, is ri...
Weaving together cultural, political economic, and ethnographic analysis, and based upon 3.5 years o...
textIn this investigation I discuss power relations between agricultural frontier colonists and the ...
The history of modern Nicaragua is populated with leaders promising a new and better day. Inevitably...
This article discusses the emergence of demands for regional autonomy amongst the Miskitu inhabitant...
textThis dissertation explores how afro-descendent Creoles from the Atlantic Coast of Nicaragua eng...
This article explores the politics, discursive utterances and postures of an under-studied indigenou...
In recent years, child migrants from Central America have arrived in the United States in unpreceden...
This article examines some of the negative impacts of ethnic self-regulation on the processes of dem...
The following article continues ALB\u27s comparative examination of the struggles of other indigenou...
As a colonial model of organizing power, the nation-state has allowed the construction of a relation...
In recent years, child migrants from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador have made the perilous jour...
Mestizos have lived on Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast since at least 1894 and been the majority group s...