Indigenous Rights and the Quest for Participatory Democracy in Latin America
Source
doi: 10.1177/002088170404200104 International Studies January 2005 vol. 42 no. 1 61-76
Abstract
Democratic transition in the 1980s and
1990s ushered in Latin America’s basic constitutional
reforms aimed
at addressing the issues of indigenous
peoples’ identity and their rights. Although the changes reflect the
democratic aspirations and the consolidation of new
rights to the hitherto excluded segments of society,
they
also seem to be a response to a variety of other
pressures (both political and economic) currently felt
throughout
the region. Political and economic
changes witnessed in the democratization process suggest the
reconfiguration of the state in Latin America. It
provides the context for the belated recognition of
cultural
pluralism and the ensuing balance between
indigenous participation within the institutions of
state on the
one hand, and respect for the
autonomy of indigenous institutions on the other. However, given that
the
constitutionally guaranteed collective rights are
only instruments they cannot be substitutes for an
inter-cultural
dialogue. Therefore, the process of
democratization needs to go beyond giving recognition to cultural and
legal pluralism.
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