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Anthropology of Citizenship? ... Ethnic. Under Construction from Latin America
Place of publication | Year of publication | Collation: 
Tuxtla Gutiérrez | 2007 | pp. 35-59
ISBN/ISSN: 
ISSN 1665-8027
Author: 
Xochitl Leyva Solano
Region: 
Latin America and the Caribbean

The main argument of this article develops around the concept of citizenship which I will examine taking as a starting point contributions made in the fields of law studies, philosophy and anthropology. There have been considerable advances in the social sciences with the proposition and discussion of new composite concepts such as “multicultural citizenship”, “intercultural citizenship”, and “ethnic citizenship”. With “ethnic citizenship” in particular, scholars have been trying to respond to the history and nature of the demands, claims and struggles that indigenous organizations and communities, movements and their leaders have made in Latin America over the past three decades. ¿Who proposed this concept, and when, where and for what purposes was it developed? What are the advantages and limits of “ethnic citizenship”? Who is using this concept now and in what social and political contexts? This discussion leads me to ask whether it is possible to speak of an emerging, alternative Latin American model of interpretation.

Files: 
Resource Type: 
Research papers / journal articles
Theme: 
Civic / Citizenship / Democracy
Human rights
Diversity / cultural literacy / inclusive
Level of education: 
Non-formal education
Keywords: 
citizenship
human rights
diversity