castillo_2014_indigenous movements in la of 1990s

Upload: gerardo-castillo

Post on 03-Jun-2018

222 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    1/43

    1

    International Lending Institutions, the State, and Indigenous Movements in the

    Latin America of the 1990s1

    Gerardo Castillo2

    1. Introduction

    Since 1990s, Latin America is experiencing crucial changes and challenges. After the

    collapse of the national modernization project of the import substitution model in the late

    1970s, Latin American governments have implemented structural adjustment programs,

    liberalize their economies and reduced state role under the tutelage of international

    lending institutions (namely, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank). Inaddition, new social movements within which the indigenous rights movement is a

    major actorare struggling for a more inclusive political role (Findji); and, the fragile

    democracies of the sub-continent are searching for a new social contract where

    multiculturalism and decentralization are central components. In many cases, the

    components are being expressed in constitutional reforms (Van Cott 2000).

    This paper explores some of the implications of these processes within light of the land

    reforms that involve indigenous groups, states and international lending institutions. To

    be sure, land has been the central locus of social struggles in Latin America since colonial

    times, when indigenous groups were organized around a system of labor, land and

    products expropriation. The beginning of the XX century witnessed a second wave of

    dispossession and external aggression with the strengthening of the hacienda system and

    the introduction of capitalism forms among peasant communities.3This situation led to

    thousands of landless and impoverished peasants in the highlands to massive social

    mobilizations. Many populist and nationalist governments answered with a mixed policy

    of military repression and land distribution reforms. However, the new context presents at

    1Paper based on the research conducted under the supervision of Karl Offen, Department of Geography atThe University of Oklahoma, December 2002.2Director, Societas Consultora. E-mail:[email protected] See, for instance, Mallons book for a recount of peasant struggles against capitalist incursions in thecentral highlands of Peru.

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]
  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    2/43

    2

    least three main differences. First, the geography and nature of the reforms have moved

    from land distribution in the highlands to territory demarcation in the lowlands. Second,

    struggles for land are also taking place over symbolic resources claimed through the

    reinvigoration of ethnic identities4 and over modes of self-governance.5 Third, the

    proposed reforms in the 1990s are being legitimized by discourses of democratic

    decentralization, export integration to international markets, and natural conservation

    instead of ideals of social justice.

    Through the exploration of two projects in Bolivia and Ecuador, I examine the scope and

    limits of the World Banks land reform proposals. It is argued that demarcation, titling

    and securing ownership of land projects and reforms promoted by the World Bank since

    1990 should be read as both shaping and reflecting indigenous political mobilization, butalso advancing neo-liberal agenda. This assertion implies a win-win scenario where: a)

    indigenous and peasant groups obtain land rights, cultural (for not to say ethnic) and

    political recognition, and the prospect of economic benefits (i.e. infrastructure,

    development projects and, more importantly, some degree of participation of the profits

    from natural resources exploitation); b) the state is able to attract foreign investments,

    reduce its welfare role, recover internal legitimacy among growing disappointment with

    the liberalization policies, and obtain external credibility; and, c) international lending

    institutions set a political order of liberal democracy and multiculturalism (Hale), and

    securesustainable economicexploitation of natural resources through the stabilization of

    property regimes in untitled regions.

    4 See Gros for an analysis of indigenous identity Colombia, and Fisher for Pan-Mayan resistance andconstruction in Guatemala.5Without doubt, Colombia is the country that has advanced most significantly in financial and politicaldecentralization and, also, in restituting territorial autonomy to indigenous and black communities. Forterritorial decentralization in the Amazonia see the compilation of Vieco et al., specially the articles ofClemente Forero and Juan Jos Vieco. For territorial decentralization and identity among blackcommunities in Colombia see Wades article and the interview with the Organizacin de Comunidades

    Negras de Buenaventura. The paper prepared by Offen (2002, Indigenous) provides a general overviewof decentralization and indigenous autonomy in Latin America.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    3/43

    3

    2. State-Society Relationship: A New Social Contract in Latin American Countries

    Current literature in Latin America (Jelin 1996; Reis) has delineated the dramatic changes

    that Latin American economic and political regimes have experienced over the last

    decades. These changes have meant the reduction of the state role in the economy,

    privatization of national assets and services, liberalization of internal markets, and budget

    cuts in agreement with the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and, in less

    extend, the Inter-American Development Bank6. But, and maybe more importantly in the

    long term, they have also included a political reconfiguration of the state-society

    relationship7.

    In an unintended confluence, both Neo-liberal and New Left discourses and practices

    have abandoned their emphasis on the state as the omnipresent actor in the politicalarena. Neo-liberal agenda, on the one hand, with its accent on accountability, delivery

    efficiency, capacity building, social responsibility, and good governance, regards

    organized civil society and private corporations as privileged actors in the race for

    economic development and liberal democratic consolidation at expenses of the state8.

    The New Left turn, on the other hand, has incorporated participatory democracy as its

    central concept in the political reconfiguration of the 1990s. Elsewhere, Evelina Dagnino

    has indicated that in the Latin American leftist discourse the centrality of the state has

    been replaced by the idea of democracy. After the defeat of the armed strategy, the arena

    of political struggle was no longer the capture of the state. Democracy became the

    unifying concept for fight against authoritarian states in all the fronts: from political and

    human freedom to better economic conditions, to women rights, and to ethnic and

    linguistic identities. As Dagnino puts correctly, the way to think and make politics in

    6Eduardo Lora presents an excellent comparative summary of the performance of macro-economic reformsin Latin America.7For a summarized revision of the changes in the state-society relationship, see the introduction prepared

    by Alvarez, Dagnino, and Escobar.8Many of these terms defines a discursive universe which dilutes broader political and economic constrainsto an individualistic will. For example, an approach that considers the social capitalof the community orthe social responsibility of the firm as the main factors of development, privileges local scales at theexpense of the state as political regulator and economic distributor.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    4/43

    4

    Latin America is moving from the kingdom of ideology and the state to apogee of

    hegemony and civil society (35).

    Latin American academics, trying to understand the changing panorama of the 1980s,

    moved from astatistview of politics9to an emphasis in an autonomous civil society. This

    reconceptualization was the result of major changes in social theory but also of the

    specific Latin America context convulsed by increasing social movements. Thus, new

    actors and new movements --not possible to encapsulate in the rigid correspondence of

    class interests-- put in agenda the recently rediscovered concept of civil society. In Latin

    America, civil society was less a reflection about hegemony than the practical imperative

    facing the debacle of the modern social contract: the state was not only unable to deliver

    minimum welfare but also lacked the legitimacy in the use of violence. Resistance againstauthoritarian states took shape through the organization of civil society. This original

    feature fostered a view that radically opposed civil society and the state. Moreover, from

    this point was short the step to the mythification of civil society "as a virtuous pole

    against an evil state." (Dagnino, 41).

    However, the "intellectual enthusiasm generated by the new forms of collective

    expression in the 1980s is now a thing of the past." (Jelin 1998, 405). The political

    democratization --inaugurated by the transition governments in the early 1980s-- did not

    automatically produce a strengthened civil society, a culture of citizenship, and a sense of

    social responsibility. In Latin American countries, the extreme poverty and violence

    excluded minorities from the political community. This social and economic crisis has

    led to a serious disappointment with traditional liberal democratic forms and to growing

    social mobilization.

    9As pointed by Dagnino:Under the heavy influence of Marxist structuralism, the state was conceived as a condensation of

    power relations and the specific locus of domination in the society. As the privileged focus ofattention in the analysis of politics and political transformation, the state was considered to be theonly decisive arena of power relations and, therefore, the only relevant site and target of politicalstruggle, in what came to be known as a statist view of politics. Latin American political culture

    came to reinforce such a view, since a conception of a strong and interventionist state, since ashistorically linked to the building of the nation and as the primary agent of social transformation,has been central to all versions of populism, nationalist, and developmentalist projects, whetherconservative or leftist. (Dagnino, 36).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    5/43

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    6/43

    6

    and initial capitals as the only barriers for economic growth-- failed in the early 1970s

    and was replaced for an emphasis on "basic needs", growth with redistribution, and

    investments in the rural sector. Since 1980 the Bank has moved away from a poverty

    alleviation approach and became more involved in structural changes and promoting the

    private sector development. Moving from sector programs focused in industrial and

    economic growth, the Bank became more concerned with poverty reduction policies and

    structural adjustments12in a close relationship with the IMF (Mosley et al.).13

    By the early 1990s two central elements were added to the Banks agenda: environment

    and indigenous people. Although the inclusion of these issues on the Banks policies are

    partly the result environmental NGOs and indigenous movement pressure around the

    world, it is also true that they have evolved from internal processes. This is especially thecase for the link between biodiversity and indigenous people, which has evolved from a

    reflection on poverty and land degradation. Effectively, in the last years there is an

    increasing concern about the relationship between economic performance and

    environment among academic researches and policy makers14. As Helm has noted, the

    environment has assumed a status as theeconomic problem of the 1990s, as did oil in

    1970s and inflation in the 1980s (Helm, ix. Italics in the original). Equally, in current

    development discussion there is a concern in poverty, environment and development

    (Markanya 1999). Although not without differences, this development literature suggests

    that an increase in poverty within the community results in increased degradation.

    Conversely, a reduction in poverty will reduce environmental degradation (de Janvry and

    Garca). In a similar line Stern, Common, and Barbier conclude that increases in

    12Structural adjustments are generally designed by the IMF and constitute the macro economic frameworkwhere the WB development strategy operates. These measures include privatization of state companies andservices; liberalization of foreign trade through tariff reductions and non-tariff barriers and; priceliberalization and deregulation. The short-term effects of the privatization process are raising

    unemployment and the deterioration of living standards but could stop government losses. Likewise, directfood supplies to target groups replace the elimination of subsidies on basic products (Kahler).13The mediation of the World Bank and IMF would not only foster private foreign capital inflows but theagreement of better conditions for both the receiving country and the trans-national corporations. Thus,many Latin American countries with mining traditions have liberalized their economy and reformed theirlegal framework under the World Bank support (World Bank 1995, Characteristics). Now, the investor isassured of total transferability of titles and of long term fiscal and foreign exchange terms and in returnmakes an enforceable commitment to carry out a specified and verifiable investment program, besides to

    pay high but clear taxes over the net incomes and dividends.14See, for instance, Lpez or World Bank (2000).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    7/43

    7

    economic development have a complex effect on the environment, but in the long-term

    should help reduce poverty and improve the environment15.

    Among this debate, the World Bank has re-oriented its policies from industrial growthto

    conservation and sustainable economic development. Thus, altogether with the United

    Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the United Nations Environmental

    Programme (UNEP), the World Bank is one the Implementing Agencies16of the Global

    Environment Facility Program (GEF)17.

    Result of the 1992 Rio Earth Summit, the GEF is a mechanism for providing funds to

    achieve global environmental benefits in four focal areas: Climate change; Biological

    diversity; International waters; and Ozone layer depletion. Activities concerning landdegradation, desertification and deforestation are also eligible for funding as they relate

    to the four focal areas. The GEF serves as the financial mechanism for the Conservation

    of Biological Diversity, the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, and as the

    interim financial mechanism for the implementation of the Persistent Organic Pollutants

    program. (World Bank 2002, Global). As one of the three implementing agencies of

    the GEF, the World Bank:

    [] assists its member countries conserve and sustainably use their biological

    diversity, reduce their emissions of greenhouse gases, manage shared water

    bodies and reduce their emissions of ozone-depleting substances by accessing

    15 Nevertheless, there are more critical positions stating that social and political historical processes namely, colonial experience (Watts) or structural adjustments programs have resulted in increments of

    poverty and environmental degradation in a large number of developing countries. For instance, Veeningand Groenendijk for the Guianas and Bowles et al. for Latin America, argue that logging and timberextraction are indirectly subsidized by host states in terms of infrastructure (namely, ports and roads),

    exoneration of taxes and royalties, and non-payment of social and environmental externalities. Thus, LatinAmerican tropical forest is starting to replace Asian timber extraction where production droppeddramatically.16The World Bank's primary role is in ensuring the development and management of investment projects.The United Nations Development Programme's main concern is in ensuring the development andmanagement of capacity building programs and technical assistance projects. The United NationsEnvironment Programme's first task is to catalyze the development of scientific and technical analysis andto advance environmental management in GEF-financed activities.17The GEF consists of an Assembly of all participating countries, and Council, Secretariat, a Scientific andTechnical Advisory Panel, and three Implementing AgenciesUNDP, UNEP and the World Bank.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    8/43

    8

    GEF resources to cover the incremental costs of additional actions on these global

    issues. (World Bank 2002, Global).

    Nowadays, in addition, any project financed by the World Bank requires an

    Environmental Assessment, which is one of its ten environmental and social safeguard

    policies used in the Bank to examine the potential environmental risks and benefits

    associated with the its lending operations.18The Bank classifies the proposed project into

    one of four categories, depending on the type, location, sensitivity, and scale of the

    project and the nature and magnitude of its potential environmental impacts: A, B, C, D

    and F. In practical terms only the first three are used, where A refers to projects likely to

    have significant adverse environmental impacts, and C those with minimal or no adverse

    environmental impacts. The cases presented below are ranked B. These impacts are site-specific; few if any of them are irreversible; and in most cases mitigatory measures can

    be designed readily. (World Bank 1999,Environmental).

    The Banks concerns on environmental issues are clearly expressed in its forestry

    policies. The World Bank financed its first forest operations in 1949 with the purchasing

    of timber equipment. The Banks approach evolved from a focus on industrial operations

    to social forestry and agroforestry to an emphasis on conservation. Prior to the

    publication of its 1978Forestry Sector Policy, the Bank:

    [] had supported forestry primarily by investing in log extraction operations,

    pulp and paper mills, and technical assistance for species trials; and by

    strengthening forestry institutions. Forest-related lending was ad hoc and lacked

    overall appraisal of the potential of forest to contribute to economic development

    or environmental protection. In addition, [] the 1978 policy paper reflected

    growing awareness of the ecological functions of forest and their contributions to

    agricultural productivity and enhanced rural incomes. (World Bank 2002, A

    revised forest, 23).

    18The Bank's environmental assessment policy and procedures are described in Operational Policy/BankProcedures 4.01 (World Bank 1999,Environmental).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    9/43

    9

    During the 1980s, rising international concerns about the escalating rate of tropical

    deforestation and its implications for biodiversity loss, global warming, and

    environmental degradation triggered a revision of Banks policy. The Forest Policy paper

    prepared in 1991 recognized poverty reduction, policy reforms to contain deforestation,

    and resource expansion as main issues. At the same time, the policy paper emphasized

    preserving intact forest areas and concluded a Bank commitment not to finance

    commercial logging in primary moist tropical forest under any circumstances. The broad

    goals of the 1991 strategy were to prevent or significantly reduce deforestation and to

    stimulate plantations and additional forest resource creation. (World Bank 2002, A

    revised, 23).

    After a consultative process with governments, major NGOs and private sector, the Bankhave designed a new Bank Forests Sector Strategy and Operational Policy by 2002. Its

    forest diagnosis and strategy developed for Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)19

    cover three main issues: a) poverty reduction, b) integration of forest in economic

    development, and, c) protection of global and local values. (World Bank 2002, A revised

    forest, 53-54).

    The poverty reduction aim considers that some 40 million indigenous people the

    majority of them poorare concentrated in forest areas in the LAC region. The banks

    strategy is, with governments:

    to develop the policy, institutional and legal bases to protect indigenous peoples

    rights and access to forest; empower poor and marginalized people; develop

    tenure security; and integrate agroforestry and secondary forest restoration

    activitiesinvolving the poor in rural development programs. (World Bank 2002,A

    revised forest, 54. Italics added).

    19 The Latin America and the Caribbean regions contain the largest remaining areas of tropical moistrainforest, and the dependence of local and poor communities on forest of all types is high. A major joint

    paper by the World Bank and Amazon in Brazil indicates that in 83 percent of the Amazon forest, the useof land for agriculture yields low returns and has limited potential. Therefore, from the national economic

    point of view, sustainable management of forest is a much preferable use of the Amazon (Schneider et al.2002).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    10/43

    10

    The objective of integrating forest in economic development considers that an increased

    emphasis will be given to integrate forest management into cross-sectoral frame;

    governance and illegal operations issues; developing awareness of the link between broad

    economic reforms in trade and fiscal areas to forest outcomes; and catalytic investments

    in sustainable forest management. Finally, to protect global and local values the focus

    will be Bank involvement in GEF and other grant-based support to Protected Areas;

    building markets for ecosystem services; and evaluating cross-sectoral impacts on forest

    areas. (World Bank 2002,A revised forest, 54).

    The way to deal with this complex interrelation of attacking poverty, stabilizing land

    regimes, and securing biodiversity is summarized in this Bank statement about the

    Colombian Choc:The main thrust of the Bank's assistance to Colombia from the mid 1980s has

    been to help establish a policy environment supportive of growth led by the

    private sector. The [mapping and titling project] progressed to set the groundwork

    for investment through institutional strengthening with [land demarcation and]

    titling as a vital [component]. (Ng'weno 2000, 14, quoted from Offen 2002,

    Indigenous).

    Following this line, and in a paper presented to the Association of American

    Geographers, Offen argues that:

    [] the Bank's modified position is consistent with its efforts to strengthen

    property rights, to regularize and integrate a system of protected areas to enhance

    the institutional capacities governing these areas, to foment foreign direct

    investment, and to attract appropriate technologies to biodiverse areas. (2002,

    Indigenous).

    This approach goes altogether with vision of a decentralized management 20 and a

    proactive indigenous support. As Marquette has stated:

    20For the Bank, decentralized environmental management has two interrelated forms. First, it:

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    11/43

    11

    [] the Bank has moved from a reactive approach of protecting indigenous

    groups from project impacts to a more proactive approach supporting indigenous

    land rights, investment in indigenous communities, and the informed participation

    of indigenous communities in conservation and development activities (10).

    4. Indigenous Right Movements

    As previously stated, the last decades have witnessed the emergence of social movements

    that emphasizes the strengthening of civil society, formal democracy, and citizenship.

    The indigenous rights movement has became a major actor among these struggles for

    more inclusive political roles. An enduring and well-organized alliance between pro-

    human rights NGOs and indigenous associations has been able to raise ethnic andindigenous concerns to the agenda of global institutions such as the United Nations 21, the

    ILO22, or the World Bank23.

    Peasant and indigenous peoples in Latin America have experienced long-standing

    struggles against dominant conditions since early Colonial times. Along the XX century,

    [] occurs under the broader political process of decentralization, which aims to give more powerto citizens in public decision-making. Second, it is part of an economic and administrative process

    that aims to gain efficiency by transferring responsibilities from central levels of the publicadministration to local levels. (Margulis, 273. Italics added).

    21Thus, in a early document, the United Nations Sub-commission on the Prevention on Discrimination andProtection of Minorities states that indigenous communities, peoples and nations:

    [] are those which, having a historical continuity with pre -invasion and pre-colonial societiesthat developed on their territories, considered themselves distinct from other sectors of thesocieties now prevailing in those territories, or parts of them. They form a present non-dominantsector of society and are determined to preserve, develop and transmit to future generations theirancestral territories, and their ethnic identity, as the basis of their continued existence as peoples,in accordance with their own cultural patterns, social institutions and legal systems (United

    Nations, 379).22In 1989, the International Labor Organization, approved the Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention,1989, which applies:

    [] to tribal peoples in independent countries whose social, cultural and economic conditionsdistinguish them from other sections of the national community and peoples in independentcountries who are regarded as indigenous on account of their descent. It requires ratifying States torecognize the responsibility of Government to develop with the participation of the peoplesconcerned, coordinated and systematic action to protect the rights of these peoples and toguarantee respect for their integrity (ILO).

    23Although the Bank issued its first directive concerning indigenous peoples in 1982 under the title TribalPeople and in Bank-financed Projects (Davis) it was not until 1993 that a more organic strategic wasdesigned. Effectively, that year the Bank launched its Indigenous Peoples Development Initiative and,gradually, indigenous development is becoming part of its portfolio (Nieuwkoop and Uquillas).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    12/43

    12

    peasant peoples from the highlands have been involved in agrarian reforms with the land

    as the central focus of the fight (i.e. 1917 in Mexico, 1953 in Bolivia, 1964 in Ecuador, or

    1970 in Peru).

    Since the 1980s, however, with the destructuration of political struggles through class

    (unions) and political parties, women and indigenous movements are the most important

    and original forms of resistance nowadays (Gros). In fact, indigenous peoples of the

    lowlands are who are suffering the impact of an accelerated process of colonization and

    farming (i.e. Mayan Indians of the Lacandn jungle in Chiapas, Nash; Collier and

    Quaratiello) oil and mineral exploitation (i.e. the Petroecuador expansion in the Aguarico

    region, Little; or the fight againstgarimpeirosin Brazilian Amazon, Schmink and Wood)

    and development projects (i.e. the Kayaps long battle against the Xingu dam project,

    Seva Fo). Despite these aggressive intrusions of capitalism forms, indigenous identity

    movements have proved great resilience and adaptation capacity, guided by a new

    generation of leaders trained in NGOs or Catholic groups (Gros).

    In this process, as Mara Teresa Findji states for the case of indigenous authorities in

    Colombia, indigenous struggles have evolved from reactive resistance to social

    movements with extended national networks whichin some extent-- cross class, gender

    and ethnicity24. June Nash, examining the Zapatista uprising in Chiapas, argues that the

    broad social support and aims reached is part of a dramatic opposition to global economic

    processes (i.e. NAFTA) seeking accessing new natural resources areas and new markets.

    In structural opposition to these economic and political forces, indigenous movements

    would provide alternative modes of globalization, which include acknowledgement of

    collective rights, ethnic self-determination, and the creation of global civic society

    networks. This influential research approach, however, obscures the fact that the aims of

    indigenous movements are not necessarily in structural opposition to those of neo-liberal

    24 To a similar conclusion arrives Rodolfo Stavenhagen in his summary of the evolution of Mexicaningenuous movement.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    13/43

    13

    institutions but partially share an ideal of formal democracy, multiculturalism and

    territorial demarcation (Hale)25.

    In a suggestive paper, Christian Gross, argues that indigenous movements in the

    highlands and the lowlands have converged in the same claim of acknowledgment of

    its cultural difference and territorial autonomy, although starting from opposite points26.

    This indigenous movement would be product of some structural factors: the collapse of

    the household peasant production due to demographic pressure that leads to a continuous

    land sub-division in the highlands; colonization waves and the disruptive entrance to

    global market economies in the lowlands; growing access to formal education and media,

    which open the cultural horizon; and the emergence of new indigenous leaders with

    political and organizational formation in NGOs and religious organizations.

    In this sense, following Gros, indigenous movements would make use of the construction

    of the invention of the Indianness (Indianidad) as a discursive and organizational resource

    inscribed within globalization processes and power correlations with neo-liberal agencies

    and the State. In fact, the internationalization of the indigenous agenda runs parallel and

    is backed by the ONG network interested in environmental and sustainable development

    issues.

    Titling and secure tenure projects are particularly valuable because land becomes the

    symbolic and material arena where these different processes are expressed. For instance,

    indigenous conceptions of territory and property have frequently clashed with static and

    individual Western conceptions of rights. Offen (2002, Ecologa) shows how Miskitu

    groups in Nicaragua use space in a complex cycle around the year which allows them to

    have access to different resources accordingly the particular ecosystem (fisheries, hunting

    areas, forests or slash and burn agriculture). For the case of the Achuar, Descola has

    25 An additional problem is the sequence from resistance to social mobilization. Analyzing Colonialrebellions in Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru, Steve Stern criticizes traditional historiography, which hadregarded indigenous movements as pre-political, merely reactive irruptions unable to articulate other socialgroups neither to formulate a national program. Stern suggests that the political nature of indigenousmovements depends on the specific power correlations existing under specific circumstances.26While highlands groups would be fighting for national integration, lowlands groups would be strugglingagainst deleterious market intrusion in its territory.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    14/43

    14

    illustrated how Catholic and Protestant missions, military bases, and development state

    agencies have altered indigenous concept of territory and redefined its boundaries. This

    has been the result of an imposed pax among the different Jvaro families and, more

    significantly, the introduction of agriculture, limitation of collecting and hunting, and the

    compulsory resettlement around the small landing strips.

    Moreover, for indigenous peoples territory does not only refer to economic activities but

    also is the ground where the whole social (i.e. marriage, sorcery) and cultural (i.e. sexual

    attributes or landscape read through gender associations) relationships are organized and

    categorized (Echeverri). In this sense, imposed changes in territorial organization would

    led to redefinitions in ethnic identities as the hunter and recollecting Yujup and Nukak of

    the Colombian northeast have experienced (Franky and Mahecha).

    5. Study Cases

    5.1. Bolivia

    A landlocked country in the Andes, Bolivia is one the poorest in Latin America. In fact,

    accordingly estimates of the World Bank (2002,Bolivia at a glance), in 2001 its GNP per

    capita barely reached US$1,000 and 67% of Bolivian population lived below the national

    poverty line. With a very weak industrial base, Bolivian economy mainly depends on

    minerals (tin, zinc, tungsten) and gas exports and small-scale farming for local

    consumption. Bolivias area covers 1.1 million km2, of which more than 50% is forests.

    Its population of 8.5 million is concentrated in the Altiplano region where La Paz, the

    capital, and the most important cities --such as Potos, Oururo, Chuquisaca, and Tarija --

    are located. In the eastern tropical slopes, however, Cochabamba and Santa Cruzs

    economy grows, partly fueled by drug trafficking. Certainly, Bolivia is the world's third-

    largest cultivator of coca --after Colombia and Peru-- with an estimated 19,900 hectares

    under cultivation in July 2001, especially in the Chapars valley (CIA).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    15/43

    15

    Because of its dramatically low economic and social indicators, comparable with Sub-

    Saharan standards, Bolivia is the only South American country considered within the

    Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative. This initiative allows Bolivia to

    reduce its total external debt by one-half and to be eligible to the soft loan program for

    poor countries managed by the World Bank's International Development Association

    (IDA). Indeed, Bolivia was one of the first countries in Latin America in following IMF

    and WB policies of macroeconomic stability and structural adjustments since 1985. In

    terms of the World Bank, Bolivia: is a good example of a country that has achieved

    successful stabilization and implemented innovative market reforms, yet made only

    limited progress in the fight against poverty. (World Bank 2002,Bolivias Debt).

    It is estimated (CIA) that 30% of Bolivias population is of Quechua origins and other25% of Aymaras ones. As the case of Ecuador, indigenous presence in politics has

    increaser enormously. Proof of this is the second place occupied by Evo Morales, an

    indigenous candidate with nationalist discourse, in the last presidential elections.

    However, the correlation between rural areas and poverty is strong, with 81.7% of the

    rural population living below the national poverty line, almost 20 points more than the

    national average in 1999. Moreover, for the same year it is calculated that Quechua,

    Aymara or Guarani people perceive between 15% and 57% less income than Spanish

    speaking individuals (World Bank 2001,Bolivia: Indigenous, 3-4).

    5.1.1. The National Land Administration Project

    Current land distribution issues in Bolivia go back to the Agrarian Reform in 1953 with

    the sign of the decree 3464 and the creation of the Instituto Nacional de Reforma Agraria

    (INRA). The history of the so-called Law INRA reflects the changes in the countrys

    politics and economy. From being the spearhead of the land redistribution in the

    highlands and nationalizing project of the leftist and nationalist military government, in

    the 1990s, the Law INRA is being redirected to fulfill new demands of property rights

    stability and frontier expansion in the lowlands (Flores).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    16/43

    16

    Table 1. Land Use in Bolivia (in ha)

    Cultivated

    LandFallow Land Forest

    Natural

    GrasslandsTotal

    Uplands 488,284 322,782 272,644 1,355,810 2,439,520

    Valleys 331,830 78,760 1,284,903 571,581 2,267,074

    Lowlands 543,019 450,778 8,116,158 9,097,465 18,207,420

    TOTAL 1,363,133 852,320 9,673,705 11,024,856 22,914,014

    Elaborated from World Bank 1995,Bolivia: National Land, 2.

    From its creation to 1984, the state has provided land to small farmers without cost

    through colonization and expropriation of old haciendas. Although updated statistics are

    not available, it seems that land distribution in Bolivia is still very unequal. Thus, at the

    end of the 1980s, small properties (80% of the total) owned only 2.5% of the land;medium-size properties (18.1%) owned 12.1%; and large properties (1.8%) concentrated

    85.3% of the land.

    Table 2. Differences in Treatment Accordingly Types of Land Property

    Medium and Large Property Small property, peasant and indigenous

    communities

    It could revert to the state in case of abandon Property is indivisible, collective, does not

    prescribe and could not be executed

    Can be sold and given in mortgage Cannot be given in mortgage

    Subject of taxes Exempted of taxes

    Bought to the state at market prices Given by the state free or at subsidized prices

    Elaborated from Flores, 3-4.

    The law gives full property rights to the medium and large owners but restricts them to

    small farmers. The law considers small peasant property as a vital minimum and,

    although it does not forbid its sale and buying, it establishes that land distribution will be

    ensued accordingly communal customs and the plots cannot be used as mortgage. As

    result, a market differentiation would be geographically developed: relatively free land

    transactions in the east and a constrained land market in the high plateau, Andean valleys

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    17/43

    17

    and the Chaco region. This would explain the lack of credit and capital investments in the

    traditional agriculture of the second area.

    These differences would create an artificially low price for the land, which in turn would

    led to its inefficient use and, moreover, provide incentives for the occupation of more

    land in frontier regions. In brief, critics (Flores) claim that the law prevents the formation

    of land and capital markets; curbs the development of traditional agriculture; and lowers

    land prices. The law, therefore, generates excessive demand, encourage inefficiency in

    traditional areas, trigger destruction of forestland, discourage foreign investment and

    produce a cumbersome bureaucratic apparatus.

    Facing this problematic, the World Bank --altogether with the Bolivian government, theIDB and other donors-- has elaborated a comprehensive development framework. Among

    other areas, the Bank is especially interested in funding and elaborating action strategies

    in biodiversity conservation, rural community development, and land administration. In

    fact, land ownership is fundamental for the Bank objectives:

    Ownership is central to the implementation of development strategy, and

    fundamentally, to the process of societal transformation that lies at the heart of

    effective development. (World Bank 1999,Bolivia: Implementing).

    In this line, in 1995 the WB agreed to fund the National Land Administration Project in

    Bolivia at a cost of US$27.2 million27. The objectives of project attempt:

    to achieve a more efficient and transparent land administration system, clarify the

    land tenure situation, identify public land suitable for small farmer settlements

    and promote a more sustainable use of the country's land resources. (World

    Bank 2001,Bolivia: National supplement credit, 3. Italics added).

    To reach these objectives, the project would help the Government to formulate land

    administration and policy reforms, obtain accurate land ownership information, carry out

    27 The Bank, through the IDA will finance US$20.4 and the Bolivian government will contribute withUS$6.8.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    18/43

    18

    land studies, alleviate land conflicts and improve land transaction registration (World

    Bank 1995,Bolivia: National Land, 18).

    The project, thus, will:

    [] support the formulation of a sound and coherent land policy and legislation,

    carry out land mappingon three million ha to obtain cadastre information and to

    regularize the land tenure situation wherever possible, identify 500,000 ha

    suitable for small farmer settlement and increase the efficiency and transparency

    of the land administration system. (World Bank 1995, Bolivia: National Land,

    18. Italics added).28

    In addition, the project will also finance: 1) title regularization and land settlementprograms by the Instituto Nacional de Tierras (INTI), when established; and 2) the

    introduction of an integrated legal cadastral registry system when the Registro Legal del

    Catastro (RLC) is established. (World Bank 1995,Bolivia: National Land, 18).

    Accordingly the Bank, the legal reforms and land institutions strengthening proposed in

    the project would improve the current land administration system thereby facilitating its

    transition to a permanent and integrated geographical and legal land system as envisaged

    by the Government (World Bank 2001, Bolivia: National supplement credit, 3). The

    National Land Administration Project contains eight main components:

    a) Reform of the legal framework

    This component contemplates the revision of land tenure reform legislation, which

    includes the INTI law, the RCL law, and the Land law. The INTI law would create the

    Instituto Nacional de Tierras as the sole authority to distribute public lands and carry out

    the cadastre and land titling regularization. The RCL law would creates the Registro

    Legal del Catastro and provide legal status to the cadastre and registry procedures. The

    28In 2001 the bank was discussing the approval of a supplemental credit with the objective of:[] strengthen further the efficiency and transparency of the Borrowers land administration

    system, especially with regard to its functioning in the Andean region; to complete land titling inover 3 million total hectares; and to implement a sustainable national legal cadastral system.(World Bank 2001,Bolivia: National supplement credit, 3. Italics added).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    19/43

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    20/43

    20

    The CI would identify, reserve and assess the suitability of 500,000 ha of public land to

    be made available for distributing to small-holders. The land settlement program aims at

    directing spontaneous settlers to areas suitable for agriculture and livestock thereby

    diverting them from environmentally fragile lands. (World Bank 1995,Bolivia: National

    Land, 25.) The identification process includes environmental analysis to determine

    weather: a) soils in prospecting areas are suitable for agriculture; b) areas do not include

    unique ecosystems or of biodiversity importance; c) areas do not located within lands

    claimed by indigenous people.

    d) Strengthening of the property registry

    The program seeks to improve the capacity of the Property Registry (Derechos Reales) to

    register titles and land transactions in rural areas.

    e) Strengthening of the Instituto Nacional de Tierras (INTI)

    The INTI will merge the CNRA and the INC and will have a central office with four

    divisions: a) geographic information, in charge of the cadastre; b) tenure regularization

    and titling, in charge of titling and conflict resolution; c) land settlements; and d)

    administration and finance.

    An external commission, Comisin Nacional Agraria, will provide assistance for the

    formulation of the INTI law. A broad range of stakeholders including state agencies,

    peasant and indigenous organizations, or commercial farmer groupswill be part of the

    commission.

    f) Title regularization (Cat-Sat)

    The objective of this program is to resolve conflicts between landholders and to register

    and regularize land titles. The process includes: promotion of Cat-Sat, conflict resolution,

    publication of field results, registration in the Property Registry (DDRR) and Registro

    Legal de Catastro (RLC), and issuance of Registry Certificates.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    21/43

    21

    Financing would be provided to conduct land regularization and titling efforts of

    smallholders in the Departments of La Paz and Santa Cruz, and the titling of Tierras

    Comunitarias de Origen (TCOs) in La Paz and Potos Departments. One objective of the

    titling activity would be develop, test and validate methodologies for land titling that

    would address the range of land tenure arrangements in both the eastern lowlands and the

    Andean region (World Bank 1995,Bolivia: National Land, 26-28).

    g) Land settlement program

    The program seeks to direct spontaneous settlers to areas suitable for agriculture and

    livestock accordingly technical studies. The allocation of public lands will require

    Environmental Impact Assessments, cannot be located in areas occupied by indigenous

    peoples, and will not exceed a maximum of 50 ha, depending on technological and soilconditions. Virtually all of the lands eligible for small farmers would be in tropical and

    sub-tropical lowlands. (World Bank 1995,Bolivia: National Land, 28-29, 80)

    h) Legal Cadastral Registry

    With regard to the National Land Registry, the financing would allow for the completion

    of a reliable and accessible national land registry including geographical (i.e. cadastral)

    information. The full establishment of an effective and sustainable land registry system

    depends on finalizing the technical development and installation of a computerized,

    integrated registry containing geo-references for all registered titles, and increasing

    access to the departments offices and 12 rural, regional offices into the automated

    registry system (World Bank 1995,Bolivia: National Land, 29-30).

    5.2. Ecuador

    As any other country of the Andean region, Ecuador presents sharply economic,

    geographical and ethnic differences (World Bank 2002, Ecuador). Within an area of

    283,600 km2, Ecuador's population of 12.6 million is essentially divided among the

    coastal and highland regions. Guayaquil, the major port, is also the financial and

    commercial center and dominates the coastal area, which economy is thrived by

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    22/43

    22

    agricultural and fishing exports (namely, bananas and shrimps). The highlands host

    Quito, the capital, and the traditional powers linked to small-scale farming and services.

    In recent decades, the Amazon region, although sparsely populated have acquired

    national importance because its large reserves of oil by far the main countrys export

    commodityand forest resources, and its geopolitical significance31.

    As in the case of Bolivia, Ecuador is affected by extreme poverty conditions. In fact,

    accordingly the PNUD, 52,3 percent of the Ecuadorians live in poverty with less than 2

    US$ daily. This poverty conditions are particularly harsh among indigenous and afro-

    ecuadorian peoples. Thus, in 1994, 83%32 of indigenous living in villages and 81% of

    afro-ecuadorians living in predominantly black areas were below the national poverty

    line (World Bank 1997, 20).

    Also similar to other countries in the region, the WB and other multilateral lending

    agencies have a strong involvement in Ecuadors policies, especially after the key

    dollarizing legislation in March 2000. Since the 1980s, rural development projects with

    land titling and economic infrastructure includedwere added to the portfolio of

    interventions of the WB and IDB. The ongoing Rural Development Project is a project of

    this type with some coverage of indigenous communities. In land management, United

    States Agency for International Development (USAID) has financed a small land

    cadastre pilot, which has not been followed up due to high cost per hectare. The strategy

    of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) identified three program

    areas of intervention: 1) farm activities for households with sufficient land; 2) non-farm

    income generating activities for households with insufficient land based on rural

    linkages; and 3) land reform and titling. The IFAD implemented this strategy in the

    Upper Basin of the Caar River Rural Development Project and the Saraguro-Yacuambi

    Rural Development Project.

    31The access to the Amazon basin, and thus to the Atlantic, is of enormous importance for the country andit has been the cause of recurrent army conflicts with Peru. Ecuadors government has frequently usedindigenous populations, especially Achuar, as a front line army. For a description of some consequences ofthese practices see Descola.32 This is approximately 14% higher than the rural average and 32% higher than the national average(Nieuwkoop and Uquillas, 6).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    23/43

    23

    Still more important for our purposes, are the WB co-financed projects of the

    Agricultural Census and Information System, the ChocAndean Corridor Project, and

    the EcuadorIndigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian Peoples Development Project.

    5.2.1. Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian Peoples Development Project

    At a cost of US$50 million33, the development objective of the Indigenous and Afro-

    Ecuadorian Peoples Development Project is:

    [] to improve the quality of life of poor rural indigenous and afro-Ecuadorian

    communities by providing improved access to land resources and financing for

    investment subprojects, which are planned and in most cases implemented by

    local membership organizations and communities in accordance with existing

    cultural values, vision of development and capacity for self-management. (World

    Bank 1997, 2. Italics added).

    To fulfill this objective, the project has designed four main components: a)

    Institutionalization of local membership organizations and communities; b) Support to

    the regularization of land and water rights; c) Rural investments; and, d) Institutional

    strengthening of the Consejo Nacional de Planificacin y Desarrollo de los Pueblos

    Indgenas y Negros (CONPLADE-IN).

    a) Institutionalization of local membership organizations and communities

    The implementation of the first component seeks to enable indigenous and afro-

    ecuadorian communities and their organizations to take the process ofdevelopment in

    their own hands in accordance with their cultural norms. (World Bank 1997, 2).

    Although pro-indigenous legislation has been relatively weak and ambiguous in Ecuador

    (World Bank 1997, 46), its indigenous and to a lesser extent afro-ecuadorianpeoples

    33The implementation period covers from 1998 to 2001 and the projects costs are divided among the IBRD(50%), IFAD (30%), government (11.7%), beneficiaries (7.6%), and private institutions (0.7%) (WorldBank 1997, 52).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    24/43

    24

    are highly organized and in recent years has been a major actor in Ecuadorian politics 34.

    Their participation in politics has allowed them to achieve positions of representation in

    several local and regional governments, in the National Congress and in several

    executive-branch agencies (i.e. CONPLADE-IN).

    Table 3. Target Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian Population by Ethnicity and Region

    Region Ethnicity/Location Population

    Costa-Sierra/Afro-

    Ecuadorian region

    Eloy Alfaro 23,256San Lorenzo 9,067Esmeraldas 86,653Chota-Mira 22,793

    Amazonia Runa, Sucumbios 8,463Runa, Napo 25,470

    Runa, Pastaza 15,866Shuar, Upano 19,412Shuar, Transcutucu 11,011Shuar, Zamora 3,740Others (Huao, Siona, Secoya, Cofn) 3,221

    Sierra North Runa, Otavalo 63,726Runa, Cayambe-Quito 51,289

    Sierra Center-South Runa, Cotopaxi 72,476Runa, Tungurahua 62,984Runa, Chimborazo 148,715Runa, Bolvar 35,086Runa, Caar-Azuay 62,447Runa, Saraguro 11,936

    Costa Costa Seca (Huancavilcas, Manteos, Punaes) 65,997Others (Cachi, Epera, Tschilas, Awa) 9,892

    TOTAL 813,500Elaborated from World Bank 1997, 19.

    At community level, it is estimated that 2,325 grassroots organizations have been formed

    (communes, centers and cooperatives). These in turn have formed 160 second-tier

    organizations OSGs- (associations, unions, federations) and are frequently affiliated

    with provincial, regional and national organizations, culminating in coordinating

    organizations such as the Comit del Decenio and the Consejo de Nacionalidades

    34 Proof of this, is that a major indigenous mobilization in 2000 to Quito helped to overthrown theMahuads government, which was trying to implement neo-liberal economic policies in the country.Moreover, in the last elections, ex-colonel Lucio Gutirrez has been declared president, mainly because ofthe indigenous and peasant support.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    25/43

    25

    Indgenas (World Bank 1997). Indigenous and afro-ecuadorian communities are formally

    recognized under the Ley de Organizacin y Rgimen Comunal (issued in 1937 and

    reinforced with the agrarian reforms of 1964 and 1973), and entered in a register

    managed by the Ministry of Agriculture. The project focuses on approximately 815,000

    indigenous and afro-ecuadorians settled in rural areas. They represent 6.5 percent of the

    countrys population.

    Accordingly the project appraisal, the indigenous and afro-ecuadorian population is

    concentrated in 48 cantons, which in turn contain 228 rural parroquias (226 indigenous

    and 58 afro-ecuadorian), representing 29% of countrys total. However, in almost all the

    cases these populations live with mestizoand white people. Therefore, the percentage of

    indigenous and black population in theseparroquiasvaries. These groups represent morethan 50 percent in 150parroquias(111 indigenous and 39 afro-ecuadorian).

    The beneficiaries of the project are members of grassroots community organizations,

    which in turn have associated themselves with OSGs. In this area, the project works at

    three levels: communities, OSGs, and regional or national organizations, including the

    Comit del Decenio and the Consejo de Nacionalidades Indgenas. The project regards

    the community as the basic form of social organization and cultural reproduction for

    Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian peoples legally recognized by the state. At operational

    level, however, it privileges the OSG level mainly because it brings grassroots

    organizations together and because it has demonstrated the ability to work not only on

    political but also economic issues, a problem faced by apex organizations.

    Four are the main activities proposed in order to reach the project component objective:

    1) Technical assistance and support to the functioning of key organizations and

    communities (i.e. preparation of Local Development Plans); 2) Revitalization of peoples

    at risk such as the Huaroni, Siona-Secoya, Cofn, Chachi, Tsachila, Ember and Aw

    (i.e. formulation of emergency plans covering organization, defense of land, cultural

    demands, natural resource management, and basic services); 3) Education and training

    (i.e. training using traditional methodologies as well as formal seminars on issues such us

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    26/43

    26

    land tenure, community management, environment, biodiversity, or ecoturism); and 4)

    Rescue and strengthening of cultural patrimony (i.e. promotion of ritual and

    archeological sites, traditional festivities, ethnographic materials, living heritage and

    traditions, cultural identity debates, or publication of works by indigenous and afro-

    ecuadorian authors).

    b) Support to the regularization of land and water rights

    The project recognizes that Ecuador presents a very unequal distribution of land

    ownership. Thus, for instance, in thesierraregion farms of 0 to 5 ha constitute 80.2% of

    all farms and occupy 14.1% of total area. In contrast, the 1.6% farms over 100 ha own

    42.9% of all lands. It is also stated that until its disappearance in 1994, the Instituto

    Ecuatoriano de Reforma Agraria y Colonizacin (IERAC) has adjudicated approximately6.7 million ha, although the transference of land from the latifundio to the smallholders

    the impact of the state-led land reform has been modest.

    Table 4. Land Reform in Ecuador: 1964-1994

    Region Agrarian Reform/

    Adjudications

    Has

    Colonization**

    Has

    Beneficiaries

    Amazon 3,508,604* 1,336,758 ?Sierra 597,155 - 89,693Costa 297,290 917,250 30,474Total 4,403,049 2,254,008Elaborated from World Bank 1997: 25.

    * Adjudications to indigenous groups in the Amazon region (53%).

    ** Titling of lands to settlers in frontier regions (34%).

    The project (World Bank 1997, 2, 25-33), however, does not focus on land distribution

    but on land titling, especially in the lowlands. It is estimated that some 2,500,000 ha

    remain untitled in Ecuador, of which 30% is in areas under the jurisdiction of the InstitutoEcuatoriano Forestal y de Areas Naturales y Vida Silvestre (INEFAN). Though the long-

    term objective cover this area, the project aims to initiate concrete activities through:

    First, technical assistance in the preparation of legal reforms on a procedure to adjudicate

    lands in forest areas (patrimonio forestal del estado) while ensuring adequate

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    27/43

    27

    management of natural resources; the preparation of management plans and the definition

    of ancestral possession; the writing of a unified management plan for the Instituto

    Nacional de Desarrollo Agrario (INDA) and INEFAN; and the including of provisions in

    the Ley Forestal y de Areas Naturales Protegias, Vida Silvestre y Biodiversidad, allowing

    recognition on land property rights of indigenous and black communities in protected

    areas.

    Second, land regularization on lands claimed by indigenous and afro-ecuadorian peoples

    with rights of ancestral possession; other lands claimed by indigenous and afro-

    ecuadorian peoples that required land purchase in selected disputed areas (namely, the

    cantones of Ibarra, Cotacachi, Otavalo, Saquisil, Pujul, Latacunga, and Guaranda);

    lands claimed by indigenous and afro-ecuadorian peoples within areas declared nationalforestry patrimonium (patrimonio forestal del estado) and under jurisdiction of INEFAN;

    and, lands claimed by indigenous and afro-ecuadorian peoples in protected areas

    (patrimonio de reas naturales). This regularization includes the recognition of

    indigenous and black communities legal status, demarcation of land, and the elaboration

    of management plans35.

    Third, the implementation of diagnostic study and the elaboration of an action plan for

    the estimated 2,000 community-owned irrigation systems. This plan includes the

    inventory of water sources, conflicts, rights, distribution systems, schemes, implementing

    agencies, etc.

    c) Rural investments

    This component includes infrastructure and financial, technical and managerial assistance

    in order to increase access of indigenous communities to services and markets and to

    diversify and intensify rural production. (World Bank 1997, 2). The rural investment

    logic defines two kinds of interventions: of public/communal nature and

    private/individual nature. The first includes investments in productive infrastructure,

    social infrastructure, training and technical assistance, environmental and natural

    35Initially, the project focuses in the areas of Esmeraldas, Sucumbos, Napo, y Pastaza.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    28/43

    28

    resources management, and institutional strengthening. The second includes investments

    in agriculture and micro-enterprises (i.e. handicraft).

    d) Institutional strengthening of the Consejo Nacional de Planificacin y Desarrollo

    de los Pueblos Indgenas y Negros (CONPLADE-IN)

    The objective of this project component is to secure a shift from the homogenizing ideal

    of cultural assimilation and equal citizenship to the recognition of cultural diversity and

    the promotion of ethno-development. It would be reached through the strengthening of

    CONPLADE-IN, an institution created in 1997 with the direct representation of

    indigenous and afro-ecuadorian organizations.

    This dream come true (World Bank 1997, 47) organization is in charge of generating

    state policies benefiting indigenous and black populations, and executing and

    coordinating programs and projects. Its main tasks include intercultural development in

    Ecuadors society; legal, political and administrative reform of the state; comprehensive

    and sustainable development; and, affirmation of bilingual and intercultural identity and

    education.

    The activities proposed in this last program involve: a) the improvement of information

    systems; b) elaboration of a system of project planning, monitoring and evaluation; c)

    formulation of a national plan for indigenous and afro-ecuadorian development; d)

    formulation of legal reforms and public policies, including the indigenous peoples law,

    new communes law, the law for the recognition of indigenous health systems, the law of

    indigenous peoples cultures, and the development of capacity to review current

    legislation from an indigenous point of view; and e) the establishment of a decentralized

    Project Implementation Unit, with its heart quarters in Quito and implementing offices in

    seven regions (World Bank 1997, 47).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    29/43

    29

    6. Final Considerations

    Through the exploration of two projects in the Andean region, I have examined some

    characteristics of land reforms supported by the World Bank. Demarcation, titling and

    securing ownership of land projects and reforms promoted by the World Bank since 1990

    should be read as both shaping and reflecting indigenous political mobilization but also

    advancing neo-liberal agenda. There is a fortuitous convergence between indigenous

    struggles of autonomy, state attempts to recover internal and external legitimacy, and the

    liberal ideology of self-government and free-market. I like to highlight three issues,

    which would require further research. In this line, I like to highlight three issues, which

    would require further research.

    6.1. Land reforms and state legitimacy

    As in the decades from the 1950s to the 1970s, nowadays Latin American countries are

    facing an urgency of land reforms. However, there are crucial differences between both

    periods. In general terms, the agrarian reforms of previous decades were signed by: a) a

    heavily ideologically charged discourse of social justice and populism; b) authoritarian

    top-down mechanisms leaded by the state and imposed by revolutionary leftist

    governments (for instance, the cases of Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Mexico or Peru); c)

    distribution of land among peasants in the highlands and coastal areas and colonization of

    free lands in the lowlands; and d) a development framework of self-sufficient and

    cheap agrarian production to support industrial growth.

    As suggested by the National Land Administration Project and the Indigenous and Afro-

    Ecuadorian Peoples Development Project, land reforms do not focus anymore in farming

    areas (both in the highlands and the coast) but in the frontier area of the lowlands. This

    has two main implications. On the one hand, the state populist discourse of social justice

    and wealth redistribution is abandoned for a more appealing and progressive one of

    concern with ethnic minorities and environment preservation. On the other hand, inward-

    oriented development models are shifted for export-oriented policies of natural resources

    (re-primarization of the economy) and attractive foreign capital incentives. To reach this

    objective, the titling of indigenous land and a process of financial and political

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    30/43

    30

    decentralization are some of the mechanisms set in motion. In this sense, ethno-

    development raises as the new hegemonic discourse that links indigenous claims of

    multiculturalism with late capitalist needs for accessing untouched natural resources.

    Some critics warn about possible consequences of this emergent pattern. Transnational

    firmsregarded as culturally neutralcontact directly indigenous groups and, thus, they

    would avoid state or other citizen controls (Zizek). Although the traditional position of

    the state is in some extent bypassed by the growing influence of international lending

    institutions, transnational firms, global indigenous movements, international NGOs, and

    relatively autonomous indigenous groups, the cases presented suggest that the role of

    state is still central. While in the Bolivian case, the state has a more traditional role of

    designing, directing, implementing and monitoring the reforms, in Ecuador, indigenousand black populations have a more active participation. However, in both cases legal

    reforms are expected, including issues of territorial autonomy36and multiculturalism and

    decentralized administrative frame. The State, therefore, makes a sort of concession and

    evolves to a more decentralized apparatus but it is also securing the management and

    rational exploitationof natural resources. At the same time, it meets with the new set of

    international expectations of nature preservation.

    6.2. Poverty and environment relationship

    Of course, a crucial issue is the definition of rational exploitationof natural resources.

    Talking aboutglobal andlocal values, the World Bank seems to envisage a common and

    non-conflictive goal: declaring protected areas and securing the sustainable exploitation

    of forest resources is the unquestioned value of conserving forest and biodiversity.

    Global values, however, are not undisputed and --for instance-- transnational firms,

    environmentalist groups and lending institution have not the same idea of how to protect

    natural resources. At the same time, local values do not have to coincide with

    36 In the Ecuadorian case, for example, although the proposal recognizes usufruct rights by indigenouscommunities in protected areas, it is seems that substantial forest areas would be declared national forestpatrimonium and, thus, under the States (i.e. INEFAN) jurisdiction. However, the project will also finance

    legal reforms which include provisions in the Ley Forestal y de Areas Naturales Protegidas, Vida Silvestrey Biodiversidad, authorizing indigenous and afro-ecuadorian peoples ownership of lands in protectedareas. (World Bank 1997, 31. Italics added).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    31/43

    31

    conservationist practices. There is always the danger to idealize indigenous peoples as

    closer to nature and ecologist per se. However, beyond the discursive strategies, many of

    the indigenous struggles deal more with the appropriation of benefits from natural

    resources exploitation rather than with protection of the resources.

    In addition, the projects designed by the World Bank Group refer directly to a gradual,

    unavoidable and desired process of land stability, foreign investments and market

    integration. In this sense, the environmental logic of the World Bank policy is

    straightforward: the distribution of public land among small farmers and clear property

    rights will stabilize the use of land resources37and will open incentives for the reception

    of foreign capital flows.

    In the case of Ecuador, for instance, one of the main objectives of the project is to

    improve secured access to land and water resources for indigenous and afro-ecuadorian

    peoples through the definition of collective property rights over lands and the elimination

    of market constrains which --accordingly the Banks diagnosis-- hamper access of small

    farmers to land (World Bank 1997, 26). The project appraisal, nevertheless, fails to make

    clear how it would solve supply constrains which imply the existence of a pattern of

    land market segmentation by both class and ethnicity (World Bank 1997, 26). From the

    demand side, it regards population growth and land degradation as the most important

    problems. But it is no clear if the project will promote further colonization for landless or

    smallholder peasants of the highlands or simply titling of traditional indigenous claims in

    the lowlands. Indeed, the project blurs distinctions among different land conditions and

    social realities in the coastal, sierra and lowlands regions. Therefore, if the Bank

    diagnosis considers that the lack of adequate property rights is the main constrain for

    37Thus, accordingly the project appraisal, the environmental impact of the National Land AdministrationProject in Bolivia would be strongly positive for the following reasons. First, early land tenure conflictresolution would reduce incentives to title owners to deforest land to prove occupancy. Second, private landunder more secure individual property rights would be managed in a more sustainable manner. Thus far,under the original project financing and due to the INRA law of 1996 and its regulations, INRA now

    provides incentives for conservation by: a) allowing for increased size of landholdings due to the definingof private reserves; and b) does not require land categorized as forest to show improvements (i.e.deforestation) in order for an individual to claim legitimate use. In addition, the titling of TCOs (TierrasComunitarias de Origen) in eastern Bolivia is putting limits on the expansion of un-managed, illegalextraction of forest resources (World Bank 1995,Bolivia: National Land, 80-83).

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    32/43

    32

    access to credit, efficient resources management, and conflict resolution, then, the

    solution is straightforward. However, this naf approach downplays the very unequal

    basis of the power system in the country. In other words, it legitimizes a de facto situation

    and, at the same time, makes these new lands available to the market.

    Also problematic in the logic that links individual property rights with efficient use of

    natural resources is the lack of clarity in the Banks policies. As the project diagnoses

    acknowledge, indigenous peoples have enormous resistance to the privatization of

    communal lands. However, neither in the Bolivian and Ecuadorian cases, specific

    provisions to prevent land consolidation have been designed. It would seem that the Bank

    regards communal rights as an unpleasant although necessary first step towards full

    private property rights. In any case, it could be argued the from the Bank perspective,collective titles are more attractive to foreign capital than no titles and uncertainty.

    6.3. WB, State, NGOs, and Indigenous Organizations relationship: The de-

    politicizing ethno-development

    Press notes released by the Bank celebrate the Ecuador Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian

    Peoples Development Project success for being the first time that a project defines its

    objectives in terms of "ethno-development." It would be also the first time that Ecuador's

    government has borrowed resources to invest in Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian

    communities. And in a coup for the Bank's inclusion efforts, the project marks the first

    time beneficiaries have of gone to Washington D.C. to participate in project negotiations

    (World Bank 2002,Ethno-development).

    That the Ecuadors government has borrowed for first time to invest in indigenous and

    black peoples and that beneficiaries have participated in the Bank hearth quarters

    negotiations is a sign of more inclusive political times. But it also could be read as the

    ability of the state to adopt of a more appealing discourse for accessing development

    loans. Whatever the reason, it is indicative of current times the definition of ethno-

    development as a paradigmatic discourse replacing the modernization project.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    33/43

    33

    In fact, the Ecuador Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian Peoples Development Project is the

    first Banks investment operation focused exclusively in indigenous peoples and ethnic

    minorities (Nieuwkoop and Uquillas, 4) and it is presented as a major success. Curiously

    the term ethno-development does not appear in first project documents (i.e. the project

    appraisal of 1997) but in later ones. Thus, while in the first pieces is highlighted the

    notion of inter-culturalism or the need to build a bridge of communication with

    mestizoculture (World Bank 1997, 21)the paper written by Nieuwkoop and Uquillas

    considers that ethnodevelopment:

    [] builds on the positive qualities of indigenous cultures and societies to

    promote local employment and growth. Such qualities include these peoples

    strong sense of ethnic identity, close attachment to ancestral land, and capacity tomobilize labor, capital, and other resources to achieve shared goals. These

    dynamics are recognized as fundamental to the way in which indigenous peoples

    define their own processes of development and interactions with other segments

    of society (3).

    Without trying to overshadow this optimist position, there are two issues to note. First,

    the project discourse assumes a smooth relationship among the different actors involved

    (settlers from the highlands, indigenous peoples from the lowlands, local elites, mestizo

    population, NGO and State agents, entrepreneurs, functionaries from international

    agencies, etc.), which blurs the complex power relations existing and the diverse aims

    and strategies deployed for each group.

    Second. As Hale has noted, normalizing multiculturalism, international lending

    agencies assume the power to define the limits of appropriate and extremist difference, of

    what could be tolerate and what not. In this sense, ethnodevelopment and others, re-

    appropriates and reinstalls a long-standing fight for indigenous acknowledgement into a

    capitalist logic.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    34/43

    34

    A final word. It could be argued that since the early 1990s, land titling and securing

    tenure have been identified as key elements in the development strategies elaborated by

    international lending institutions. However, what is completely new in these land reforms

    is the incorporation of concepts of multiculturalism, decentralization and some degree of

    territorial autonomy in the projects. These projects are conceived not only as tools of

    economic development but mainly as a political enterprise, which requires the

    transformation of the nation-state and the inclusion of indigenous peoples into broader

    society. Of course, the scale of these transformations will depend on the specific power

    and economic alliances en each Latin American country.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    35/43

    35

    References

    Alvarez, Sonia; Dagnino, Evelina and Arturo Escobar. Introduction: The Cultural and

    the Political in Latin American Social Movements.Alvarez, Sonia E., Evelina Dagnino,

    and Arturo Escobar, eds. Cultures of Politics, Politics of Cultures: Re-Visioning Latin

    American Social Movements. Boulder: Westview Press, 1998: 1-29.

    Bowles, Ian; Rosenfeld, Ami; Sugal, Cheri; and Russell Mittermeir. Natural Resource

    Extraction on the Latin American Tropics: a recent wave of investments poses new

    challenges for biodiversity conservation. CI Policy Briefs, 1, Spring. Washington:

    Conservation International. 1998.

    Collier, George A. with Elizabeth Lowery Quaratiello. Basta! Land and the Zapatista

    Rebellion in Chiapas. Revised edition. Oakland: Food First Boks. 1999.

    Dagnino, Evelina. Culture, Citizenship, and Democracy: Changing Discourses and

    Practices of the Latin American Left.Alvarez, Sonia E., Evelina Dagnino, and Arturo

    Escobar, eds. Cultures of Politics, Politics of Cultures: Re-Visioning Latin American

    Social Movements. Boulder: Westview Press, 1998: 33-63.

    Davis, Shelton H. The World Bank and Indigenous Peoples. 2001.

    http://wbln0018.worldbank.org/essd/essd.nsf/28354584d9d97c29852567cc00780e2a/f0e

    b151669712593852567cc0077f6a4?OpenDocument,November, 11, 2002.

    De Janvry, Alan and Ral Garca.Rural poverty and environmental degradation in Latin

    America. Rome: International Fund for Agricultural Development. 1992.

    Descola, Philippe. Cambios en la territorialidad y en la apropiacin de la tierra entre los

    Achuar.Amrica Indgena, 43 (2). April - June 1983: 299-317.

    Echeverri, Juan lvaro. Reflexiones sobre el concepto de territorio y ordenamiento

    territorial indgena. Vieco, Juan Jos et al. 2000: 173-180.

    http://wbln0018.worldbank.org/essd/essd.nsf/28354584d9d97c29852567cc00780e2a/f0eb151669712593852567cc0077f6a4?OpenDocumenthttp://wbln0018.worldbank.org/essd/essd.nsf/28354584d9d97c29852567cc00780e2a/f0eb151669712593852567cc0077f6a4?OpenDocumenthttp://wbln0018.worldbank.org/essd/essd.nsf/28354584d9d97c29852567cc00780e2a/f0eb151669712593852567cc0077f6a4?OpenDocumenthttp://wbln0018.worldbank.org/essd/essd.nsf/28354584d9d97c29852567cc00780e2a/f0eb151669712593852567cc0077f6a4?OpenDocumenthttp://wbln0018.worldbank.org/essd/essd.nsf/28354584d9d97c29852567cc00780e2a/f0eb151669712593852567cc0077f6a4?OpenDocument
  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    36/43

    36

    Evans, Graham and Jeffrey Newnham. The Dictionary of World Politics: A reference

    guide to concepts, ideas and institutions. New York : Harvester Wheatsheaf. 1992.

    Findji, Mara Teresa. From Resistance to Social Movement: The Indigenous Authorities

    Movement in Colombia. Escobar, Arturo and Sonia E. Alvarez eds. The Making of Social

    Movements in Latin America: Identity, Strategy, and Democracy. Boulder: Westview

    Press, 1992: 112-133.

    Fischer, Edward F. Cultural Logics and Global Economies: Maya Identity in Thought

    and Practice. Austin: University of Texas Press. 2001.

    Flores, Gonzalo. La ley INRA de Bolivia: una segunda reforma agraria? SD

    Dimensions. September 1999, www.fao.org/sd/Spdirect/LTan0033.htm.September 11th

    2002.

    Forero, Clemente. Descentralizacin y ordenamiento territorial. Vieco, Juan Jose et al.

    2000: 139-148.

    Fox, David J. Decentralization, Debt, Democracy, and the Amazonian Frontierlands of

    Bolivia and Brazil. Morris, Arthur and Stella Lowder.Decentralization in Latin America:

    An evaluation. New York: Prager. 1992: 17-37.

    Franky, Carlos Eduardo and Dany Mahecha. La territorialidad entre los pueblos de

    tradicin nmada del noroeste amaznico colombiano. Vieco, Juan Jos et al. 2000: 183-

    210.

    Gros, Christian. Indigenismo y etnicidad: El desafo neoliberal. Uribe, Mara Victoria and

    Eduardo Restrepo. Antropologa en la modernidad. Bogot: Instituto Colombiano de

    Antropologa/Colcultura. 1997: 15-59.

    http://www.fao.org/sd/Spdirect/LTan0033.htmhttp://www.fao.org/sd/Spdirect/LTan0033.htmhttp://www.fao.org/sd/Spdirect/LTan0033.htm
  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    37/43

    37

    Hale, Charles R. Does Multiculturalism Menace? Governance, Cultural Rights and the

    Politics of Identity in Guatemala.Journal of Latin American Studies. 34. 2002: 485-524.

    Helm, Dieter ed.Economic policy towards the environment. Oxford: Blackwell. 1991.

    ILO. Convention No. 169 on Indigenous Peoples.

    http://www.ilo.org/public/english/standards/norm/whatare/stndards/indig.htm. November

    21st2002.

    INRA.www.inra.gov.bo.September 5th2002.

    Jelin, Elizabeth. Citizenship revisited: Solidarity, responsibility, and rights. Jelin,

    Elizabeth and Eric Hersberg (eds.). Constructing Democracy. Boulder, CO: Westview

    Press. 1996: 101-119.

    ---. Toward a Culture of Participation and Citizenship: Challenges for a More Equitable

    World. Alvarez, Sonia E., Evelina Dagnino, and Arturo Escobar, eds. Cultures of

    Politics, Politics of Cultures: Re-Visioning Latin American Social Movements. Boulder:

    Westview Press, 1998: 405-414.

    Kahler, Miles (1992) "External influence, conditionality and the politics of adjustment".

    Haggard, Stephan and Robert R. Kaufman (eds.). The Politics of Economic Adjustment:

    International Constrains, Distributive Conflicts, and the State. Princeton, NJ: Princeton

    University Press. 1992.

    Little, Paul E. Amazonia: Territorial struggles on perennial frontiers. Baltimore: The

    Johns Hopkins University Press. 2001.

    Lpez, Ramn. Environmental degradation and economic openness in LDCs: the

    poverty linkage.American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 74. 1992: 1138-1145.

    http://www.ilo.org/public/english/standards/norm/whatare/stndards/indig.htmhttp://www.ilo.org/public/english/standards/norm/whatare/stndards/indig.htmhttp://www.inra.gov.bo/http://www.inra.gov.bo/http://www.inra.gov.bo/http://www.inra.gov.bo/http://www.ilo.org/public/english/standards/norm/whatare/stndards/indig.htm
  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    38/43

    38

    Lora, Eduardo. A Decade of Structural Reform in Latin America: What Has Been

    Reformed and How to Measure It. Inter-American Development Bank. Office of Chief

    Economist. Working Paper Green Series # 348. 1997.

    Mallon, Florencia E. The Defense of Community in Perus Central Highlands: Peasant

    Struggle and Capitalist Transition, 1860-1940. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

    1983.

    Margulis, Sergio. Decentralized Environmental Management. Burki, Shahid Javed and

    Guillermo E. Perry et al. (eds.)Annual World Bank Conference on Development in Latin

    America and the Caribbean 1999: Decentralization and accountability on the public

    sector. Proceedings of a conference held in Valdivia, Chile, June 20-22, 1999.Washington D.C.: The World Bank. 2000: 273-289.

    Markanya, A. Poverty, environment and development. Draft. Bath: University of Bath.

    1999.

    Mosley, Paul; Harrigan, Jane and John Toye. Aid and Power: The World Bank and

    Policy Based Lending. Vol. I and II. London: Routledge. 1991.

    Nash, June C. Mayan Visions: The Quest for Autonomy in an Age of Globalization. New

    York: Routledge. 2001.

    Nieuwkoop, Martien van and Jorge E. Uquillas. Defining Ethnodevelopment in

    Operational Terms: Lessons from the Ecuador Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadoran Peoples

    Project. LCR Sustainable Development Working Paper No. 6. Washington D.C.: World

    Bank. January 2000.

    Ng'weno, Bettina. "On Titling Collective Property, Participation, and Natural Resource

    Management: Implementing Indigenous and Afro-Colombian Demands." World Bank.

    2000.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    39/43

    39

    Offen, Karl. Indigenous Autonomy and Nature Conservation in Latin America: A

    Comparative Perspective. Paper presented at the 98th Annual Meeting of the

    Association of American Geographers, March 1923, 2002.

    ---. Ecologa cultural Miskita en los aos 1650-1850. Wani. 30. July-September 2002:

    42-59.

    Organizacin de comunidades negras de Buenaventura. Interview. Escobar, Arturo and

    Alvaro Pedroza eds. Pacfico Desarrollo o diversidad?: Estado, capital y movimientos

    socials en el Pacfico colombiano. Bogot: Ecofondo, Cerec. 1996: 245-265.

    PNUD.Informe sobre desarrollo humano 2002: Profundizar la democracia en un mundo

    fragmentado. Madrid: Mundi-Prensa Libros. 2002.

    Reis, Fabio W. The state, the market, and democratic citizenship. Jelin, Elizabeth and

    Eric Hersberg (eds.). Constructing Democracy. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. 1996:

    121-138.

    Rojas, Fernando. The Political Context of Decentralization in Latin America. Burki,

    Shahid Javed and Guillermo E. Perry et al. (eds.) Annual World Bank Conference on

    Development in Latin America and the Caribbean 1999: Decentralization and

    accountability on the public sector. Proceedings of a conference held in Valdivia, Chile,

    June 20-22, 1999. Washington D.C.: The World Bank. 2000: 9-31.

    Schmink, Marianne and Charles H. Wood. Contested Frontiers in Amazonia. New York:

    Columbia University Press. 1992.

    Schneider et al. Sustainable Amazon: Limitations and Opportunities for Rural

    Development. World Bank Technical Paper/Environment Series. Washington D.C. 2002.

  • 8/12/2019 Castillo_2014_Indigenous Movements in LA of 1990s

    40/43

    40

    Seva Fo., A. Oswaldo. Ecologia o