The first attempt to assess the implications of internationally acclaimed indigenous rights for rural poor communities across different countries and policy issues, such as land, natural resources and service provision. A pioneering work which uses important policy implications to challenge consolidated assumptions on recognition politics.
The first attempt to assess the implications of internationally acclaimed indigenous rights for rural poor communities across different countries and policy issues, such as land, natural resources and service provision. A pioneering work which uses important policy implications to challenge consolidated assumptions on recognition politics.
Lorenza B. Fontana is Associate Professor of International Politics in the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Glasgow. Her research has addressed questions around the ethnic politics of socio-environmental conflicts, the domestic politics of human rights of vulnerable groups, and, more recently, the contentious politics of wildfires.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. Recognition Conflicts 2. Citizenship and Development in the Andes 3. Class and Ethnic Shifts 4. Recognition for Whom? 5. The Physical Boundaries of Identity 6. Unsettled Demographies 7. Struggles for Inclusion and Exclusion 8. Rethinking Recognition: What are the Implications for Identity Governance?.
Introduction 1. Recognition Conflicts 2. Citizenship and Development in the Andes 3. Class and Ethnic Shifts 4. Recognition for Whom? 5. The Physical Boundaries of Identity 6. Unsettled Demographies 7. Struggles for Inclusion and Exclusion 8. Rethinking Recognition: What are the Implications for Identity Governance?.
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