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Indigenous Territorial Autonomy
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table of contents
  1. Contents
  2. Foreword
  3. Introduction
  4. Part I
    1. 1. The Right to Self-Determination and Indigenous Peoples: The Continuing Quest for Equality
    2. 2. The Implementation Gap for Indigenous Peoples’ Rights to Lands and Territories in Latin America (1991–2019)
    3. 3. Framework Law on Autonomy and Decentralization for Indigenous First Peoples Peasant Autonomies (AIOCs): Autonomous Regulation or Institutional Restriction?
    4. 4. Indigenous Autonomy in Bolivia: From Great Expectations to Faded Dreams
    5. 5. The Tragedy of Alal: Regression of Rights in the Nicaraguan Autonomous Regime
    6. 6. Mapuche Autonomy in Pwelmapu: Confrontation and/or Political Construction?
    7. 7. A Future Crossroads in Rebellious and Pandemic Times: National Pluralism and Indigenous Self-government in Chile
  5. Part II
    1. 8. Restoring the Assembly in Oxchuc, Chiapas: Elections through Indigenous Normative Systems (2015-2019)
    2. 9. Building Autonomies in Mexico City
    3. 10. Neggsed (Autonomy): Progress and Challenges in the Self-government of the Gunadule People of Panama
    4. 11. Autonomy, Intersectionality and Gender Justice: From the “Double Gaze” of the Women Elders to the Violence We Do Not Know How to Name
    5. 12. The Thaki (Path) of Indigenous Autonomies in Bolivia: A View from the Territory of the Jatun Ayllu Yura of the Qhara Qhara Nation
    6. 13. Indigenous Jurisdiction as an Exercise of the Right to Self-determination and its Reception in the Chilean Criminal Justice System
    7. 14. Indigenous Autonomy in Ecuador: Fundamentals, Loss and Challenges
  6. Part III
    1. 15. Gender Orders and Technologies in the Context of Totora Marka’s Autonomous Project (Bolivia)
    2. 16. Autonomy as an Assertive Practice and as a Defensive Strategy: Indigenous Shifts in Political Meanings in Response to Extreme Violence in Mexico
    3. 17. Building Guaraní Charagua Iyambae Autonomy: New Autonomies and Hegemonies in the Plurinational State of Bolivia
    4. The Path to Autonomy for the Wampís Nation
    5. 18. “¡Guardia, Guardia!”: Autonomies and Territorial Defense in the Context of Colombia’s Post Peace-Accord
    6. 19. Indigenous Self-government Landscapes in Michoacán: Activism, Experiences, Paradoxes and Challenges
    7. 20. Indigenous Governance Innovation in Canada and Latin America: Emerging Practices and Practical Challenges
  7. List of Contributors
  8. Index

Global Indigenous Issues Series

Series Editor: Roberta Rice, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Calgary

ISSN 2561-3057(Print) ISSN 2561-3065 (Online)

The Global Indigenous Issues series explores Indigenous peoples’ cultural, political, social, economic and environmental struggles in para-colonial and post-colonial societies. The series includes original research on local, regional, national, and transnational experiences.

  • No. 1 ∙ Flowers in the Wall: Truth and Reconciliation in Timor-Leste, Indonesia, and MelanesiaEdited by David Webster

  • No. 2 ∙ Indigenous Territorial Autonomy and Self-Government in the Diverse Americas Edited by Miguel González, Ritsuko Funaki, Araceli Burguete Cal y Mayor, José Marimán, and Pablo Ortiz-T

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Indigenous Territorial Autonomy and Self-Government in the Diverse Americas
© 2023 Miguel González, Ritsuko Funaki, Araceli Burguete Cal y Mayor, José Marimán, and Pablo Ortiz-T
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