This book investigates how western anthropological trends, development discourse and transnational activism came to create and define the global indigenous movement.
Introduction: Labelling the Other: Anthropology, Development and
Indigeneity Part I: The Genealogy
1. The paradigm shift between social
Darwinism and integration policies for Indians in Bolivia during the 1930s
and 1940s
2. The Integrationist Paradigm for Latin America during the Cold
War period: Indigenismo, anthropology and international development Part II:
From the Integrationist Paradigm to the Indigenisation of Identities
3. For
the liberation of the Indians: the foundations of the Global and Latin
American Indigenous Movement (1968-1975)
4. Anthropologists, international
organisations and the establishment of the Global Indigenous Movement Network
during the 1970s and 1980s Part III: The Indigenisation of Identities
Paradigm in Bolivia
5. The emergence of ethnic politics and the paradigm
shift towards the Indigenisation of Identities in Bolivia during the Cold War
period and the early 1990s
6. The indigenisation of identities paradigm in
Bolivia: Transnationalism, the Bolivian state, NGOs and international
development Part IV: Ethnic Politics During the Twenty-First Century in
Bolivia
7. Contested Indigeneities in Bolivia at the turn of the new
millennium
8. The downfall of Evo Morales, the TIPNIS controversy,
post-Development and indigeneities Conclusions List of Interviews and oral
sources
Juanita Roca-Sánchez is an independent scholar, researcher and consultant. She holds a PhD in Social Science (Anthropology and Development Studies) from CEDLA-University of Amsterdam-Netherlands. She was initially trained as a historian at Universidad de Chile in Santiago, and her master studies are in Anthropology and Development from the London School of Economics-UK and Public Management from the University of Potsdam-Germany.