Suscripción institucional·Documento·1997·Inglés

The 1992 Indian Mobilization in Lowland Ecuador

Suzana Sawyer

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Resumen

province in the central Ecuadorian Amazon gathered in Puyo, the provincial capital, to embark on what would become one of the most effective mobili-zations of lowland Indians in recent Latin American history. Adorned with facial paint and feathers, carrying spears and children, often ill-prepared for the vagaries of lowland-highland climate change, Quichua, Achuar, and Shiwiar peacefully marched to Quito, Ecuador’s capital, some 240 kilometers away on the northern Andean plateau. Their goal was the realization of two demands-the communal titling of 2,000,000 hectares of contiguous rain-forest territory (approximately 70 percent of the province) and constitutional reform declaring Ecuador a plurinational and pluricultural state. The 1992 march, one of three pivotal indigenous mobilizations since 1990 to challenge the Ecuadorian state, ’ was a crucial juncture in the process of indigenous nation building. Indian leaders crafted a platform from which to voice their claims by weaving international concerns for tropical conserva-tion and indigenous rights together with local understandings of identity and place. Although support was not unanimous and victory was less than complete, the march constituted a unique moment of indigenous agency. By exploring the tensions, contradictions, and possibilities in state-indigenous and mestizo-indigenous relations, I trace the ways in which it inspired an ongoing national debate on the authority of the Ecuadorian state and the Suzana Sawyer is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Anthropology at Stanford University.

Cómo citar

Suzana Sawyer (1997). The 1992 Indian Mobilization in Lowland Ecuador. https://doi.org/10.1177/0094582x9702400305