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Contesting Citizenship In Latin America: The Ri... -

The book by Deborah J. Yashar explores why indigenous movements suddenly surged in late 20th-century Latin America.

Here is a helpful story to illustrate the book's core arguments: The Story of the Changing Village Contesting Citizenship in Latin America: The Ri...

In contrast, villages in places like might have had the same grievances, but they lacked the strong social networks or the political space to turn their frustration into a national movement. The "Postliberal Challenge" The book by Deborah J

The story doesn't end with a protest. These movements are now posing a . They are asking the state: "Can you be a democracy if you only recognize individuals, or must you also recognize our collective rights and autonomy as indigenous peoples?" . The "Postliberal Challenge" The story doesn't end with

According to Deborah Yashar , this village—and real movements in countries like and Bolivia —succeeded because of three specific things:

Feeling their way of life threatened, the villagers looked for a new way to defend themselves. They didn't just see themselves as workers anymore—they reclaimed their identity as . Why the Village Succeeded (Yashar's Three Factors)

: The shift to neoliberalism unintentionally challenged their local autonomy, giving them a reason to fight back.