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World Affairs Online
Culture and development in a globalizing world: geographies, actors, and paradigms
Culture in development thinking : geographies, actors and paradigms / Sarah A. Radcliffe -- Culture, development and global neo-liberalism / Michael Watts -- Culture and conservation in post-conflict Africa : changing attitudes and approaches / Elizabeth E. Watson -- Indigenous groups, culturally appropriate development and the socio-spatial fix of Andean development / Sarah A. Radcliffe and Nina Laurie -- Laboring in the transnational culture mines : the work of Bolivian music in Japan / Michelle Bigenho -- Social capital and migration -- beyond ethnic economies / Jan Nederveen Pieterse -- Social capital as culture? Promoting co-operative action in Ghana / Gina Porter and Fergus Lyon -- On the spatial limits of culture in high-tech regional economic development: lessons from Salt Lake City, Utah / Al James -- Mobilizing culture for social justice and development : South Africa's Amazwi Abesifazane memory cloths program / Cheryl McEwan -- Conclusions: the future of culture and development / Sarah A. Radcliffe.
Tackling Complex Inequalities and Ecuador's Buen Vivir: Leaving No‐one Behind and Equality in Diversity
In: Bulletin of Latin American research: the journal of the Society for Latin American Studies (SLAS), Band 37, Heft 4, S. 417-433
ISSN: 1470-9856
Ecuador's policy of Buen Vivir seeks to reduce social inequalities and tackle complex disadvantages associated with gender, location, race‐ethnicity, and other axes of social difference. The paper analyses governmental thinking and institutional arrangements to explore Buen Vivir's interpretations of the country's constitutional commitment to equality in diversity, in light of the Sustainable Development Goal of 'Leaving No One Behind' (LNOB). Situating Ecuador's array of measures in the context of postcolonial institutionalisation, the paper examines how colonial‐modern legacies of knowledge production and governance channel state Buen Vivir into the reproduction of exclusionary configurations of power and difference.
Introduction
In: Bulletin of Latin American research: the journal of the Society for Latin American Studies (SLAS), Band 37, Heft 4, S. 401-402
ISSN: 1470-9856
Civil Society: Management, Mismanagement and Informal Governance
In: The Palgrave Handbook of International Development, S. 227-242
Development Alternatives
In: Development and change, Band 46, Heft 4, S. 855-874
ISSN: 1467-7660
ABSTRACTDevelopment alternatives arguably emerge out of practices, negotiations and critiques of dominant development narratives and paradigms. Critical Development Studies' (CDS) practices of insightful critique and a willingness to challenge hegemonic paradigms are alive and well. Yet this article argues that CDS could fruitfully pay attention to emergent issues that have yet to receive sustained analysis and critique. The article focuses on three very different registers of development futures: evolutionary and resilience‐based thinking; post‐neoliberal experiments in Latin America; and the challenge of social heterogeneity. After summarizing the issues involved with respect to each topic, the article suggests some aspects that require further research and debate.
Gendered frontiers of land control: indigenous territory, women and contests over land in Ecuador
In: Gender, place and culture: a journal of feminist geography, Band 21, Heft 7, S. 854-871
ISSN: 1360-0524
KateSwanson2010: Begging as a Path to Progress: Indigenous Women and Children and the Struggle for Ecuador's Urban Spaces. Athens, GA and London: The University of Georgia Press
In: International journal of urban and regional research, Band 36, Heft 5, S. 1124-1126
ISSN: 1468-2427
Dismantling Gaps and Myths: How Indigenous Political Actors Broke the Mold of Socioeconomic Development
In: The Brown Journal of World Affairs, Band 18, Heft 2
Begging as a Path to Progress: Indigenous Women and Children and the Struggle for Ecuador's Urban Spaces
In: International journal of urban and regional research: IJURR, Band 36, Heft 5, S. 1124-1126
ISSN: 0309-1317
Kate Swanson 2010: Begging as a Path to Progress: Indigenous Women and Children and the Struggle for Ecuador's Urban Spaces. Athens, GA and London: The University of Georgia Press
In: International journal of urban and regional research: IJURR, Band 36, Heft 5, S. 1124-1127
ISSN: 0309-1317
Re-Mapping the Nation: Cartography, Geographical Knowledge and Ecuadorean Multiculturalism
In: Journal of Latin American studies, Band 42, Heft 2, S. 293-323
ISSN: 1469-767X
AbstractStarting from an understanding that maps of an entire nation-state territory reflect and regulate state projects and expressions of national identity, rather than providing detailed technical information for decision making, this paper examines the national maps of race/ethnicity produced under Ecuador's state-led multiculturalism. Using national-scale cartography as a means to examine contested processes of rearticulating state, citizen and nation, the paper analyses recent transformations in cartography, nation building and geographical knowledge in Ecuador. Directing a critical analysis towards the ways maps of indigenous populations are produced, circulated, authorised and read provides a distinctive lens by which to explore postcolonial questions of belonging, rights and presence. The paper discusses how, despite the emergence of innovative maps, the plurinational project envisaged by indigenous cartographers remains stymied by a series of material, cultural and postcolonial limitations.
Re-mapping the nation: cartography, geographical knowledge and Ecuadorean multiculturalism
In: Journal of Latin American studies, Band 42, Heft 2, S. 293-323
ISSN: 0022-216X
World Affairs Online
Women, Ethnicity and Nationalisms in Latin America
In: Democratization, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 432-434
ISSN: 1351-0347
O. Hugo Benavides, Making Ecuadorian Histories: Four Centuries of Defining Power (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 2004), pp. x+231, $50.00; £38.00, hb
In: Journal of Latin American studies, Band 37, Heft 4, S. 835-836
ISSN: 1469-767X