Includes bibliographical references (p. 309-350) and index.
Contents:
Pt. I. Theoretical framing. Questions, approaches, and cases ; Citizenship regimes, the state, and ethnic cleavages ; The argument: indigenous mobilization in Latin America. -- Pt. II. The cases. Ecuador: Latin America's strongest indigenous movement. Pt. I: The Ecuadorian Andes and ECUARUNARI, Pt. II: The Ecuadorian Amazon and CONFENAIE, Pt. III: Forming the National Confederation, CONAIE ; Bolivia: strong regional movements. Pt. I: The Bolivian Andes: the Kataristas and their legacy, Pt. II: The Bolivian Amazon and CIDOB ; Peru: weak national movements and subnational variation. Pt. I: Peru, Ecuador, and Bolivia: most similar cases, Pt. II: No national indigenous movements explaining the Peruvian anomaly, Pt. III: Explaining subnational variation. -- Pt. III. Conclusion. Democracy and the postliberal challenge in Latin America.
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