Conflicts over extractive industry have emerged as one of the most visible and potentially explosive terrains for struggles over distribution, territory, and inequality in the Andes. We explore these relationships in Bolivia, focusing on gas extraction in the Chaco region of the southeastern department of Tarija. We consider how the expansion of extractive industry intersects with territorializing projects of state, sub-national elites, and indigenous actors as well as with questions of inequality and inequity. We conclude that arguments over the territorial constitution of Bolivia are inevitably also arguments over gas and the contested concepts of equity underlying its governance. © Canadian Journal of Development Studies, 2010. All right...
In 2008, the Department of Tarija became the epicenter of national political struggles over politica...
This unpublished encyclopedia entry gives an overview of Bolivia\u27s energy resources and mining, a...
Since its creation in 1825, Bolivia has lost half of its territory. Above all, Bolivians were most a...
Conflicts over extractive industry have emerged as one of the most visible and potentially explosive...
For most of the last two hundred years, the Bolivian Chaco has existed at the physical and political...
Framed by concepts of territorial project, social coalitions, and scalar relationships, we analyze r...
SummaryFramed by concepts of territorial project, social coalitions, and scalar relationships, we an...
For lowland indigenous peoples in Bolivia, neoliberalism brought both threats and opportunities. On ...
Capital investment in natural resource extraction has fuelled an unprecedented rush to secure hydroc...
This paper shows that the Eastern lowland states of Bolivia that have recently held “autonomy” refer...
In Bolivia, new waves of mineral and hydrocarbon extraction have set off social conflicts and become...
In 2005, indigenous leader Evo Morales was elected president on a dual promise of nationalising extr...
This thesis explores the main challenges associated with the inclusion of indigenous peoples in pr...
On 20 November 2016, residents of Gran Chaco Province in south-east Bolivia voted by popular referen...
This paper examines the active re-construction of indigenous identities within the Plurinational Sta...
In 2008, the Department of Tarija became the epicenter of national political struggles over politica...
This unpublished encyclopedia entry gives an overview of Bolivia\u27s energy resources and mining, a...
Since its creation in 1825, Bolivia has lost half of its territory. Above all, Bolivians were most a...
Conflicts over extractive industry have emerged as one of the most visible and potentially explosive...
For most of the last two hundred years, the Bolivian Chaco has existed at the physical and political...
Framed by concepts of territorial project, social coalitions, and scalar relationships, we analyze r...
SummaryFramed by concepts of territorial project, social coalitions, and scalar relationships, we an...
For lowland indigenous peoples in Bolivia, neoliberalism brought both threats and opportunities. On ...
Capital investment in natural resource extraction has fuelled an unprecedented rush to secure hydroc...
This paper shows that the Eastern lowland states of Bolivia that have recently held “autonomy” refer...
In Bolivia, new waves of mineral and hydrocarbon extraction have set off social conflicts and become...
In 2005, indigenous leader Evo Morales was elected president on a dual promise of nationalising extr...
This thesis explores the main challenges associated with the inclusion of indigenous peoples in pr...
On 20 November 2016, residents of Gran Chaco Province in south-east Bolivia voted by popular referen...
This paper examines the active re-construction of indigenous identities within the Plurinational Sta...
In 2008, the Department of Tarija became the epicenter of national political struggles over politica...
This unpublished encyclopedia entry gives an overview of Bolivia\u27s energy resources and mining, a...
Since its creation in 1825, Bolivia has lost half of its territory. Above all, Bolivians were most a...