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2007 Annual Meeting, Association of American Geographers
April 17-21 2007, San Francisco, CA


2154: Race and State Development: Racialization and the (re)production of Latin American Geographies 1

Wednesday, 4/18/07, from 8:00 AM - 9:40 AM

Description:

In this era of globalization, the simultaneous barrage of neo-liberal imperatives for state development and the resurgence of indigenous and Afro-Latin identities raises questions regarding prevailing interconnections of race and space in Latin America. On the one hand, elite and popular expressions of national identity, as well as many state development initiatives, have responded to the revalorization of indigenous and Afro-Latin citizenship through sanctioning of a multicultural citizenry. Yet, the promises of racial equality purported in the displacement of mestizaje by multiculturalism remain unfulfilled. In many ways, state development initiatives continue to emphasize racial difference whereby concomitant racial hierarchies are normalized and form a profound part of a historically rooted "racialized common sense" (Goldberg 1993); embodied in a myriad of policies, performances and popular thought in Latin America. How do globalized approaches to state development continue to (re) produce the racialization of space in Latin America? This panel seeks to critically engage the spatialization of race and the racialization of space in Latin America.

Organizer: Sharlene Mollett - Dartmouth College

Chair: Sharlene Mollett - Dartmouth College

Presenters:

Introduction: Sharlene Mollett - Dartmouth College

Daniel A Graham, ABD - University of California, Berkeley
The Accumulation of "Primitives": Neoliberal Multiculturalism and the Production of Lenca Space in Southwestern Honduras

Sharlene Mollett, Ph.D. - Dartmouth College
A "Racialized Common Sense"? Miskito Natural Resource Conflicts in the Honduran Rio Platano Biosphere Reserve

Kate Swanson, PhD - University of Glasgow
"Do you have a cure for our faces?" The racialization of indigenous youth in the Ecuadorian Andes

Joseph H. Bryan - UC Berkeley
Jim Crow at the edge of Empire; a genealogy of multiculturalism on the Atlantic Coast of Nicaragua

Discussant: Juanita Sundberg - University of British Columbia


Back to Indigenous Peoples sessions, 2007 annual meeting of the Association of American Geographers

 


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