Journal of Latin American & Caribbean Anthropology
@JournalLatin
JLACA is a peer-reviewed journal of anthropological research published by @AmericanAnthro on behalf of the Society of Latin American & Caribbean Anthropology
From the Archive:
“Socios”: The Contested Morality of “Partnerships” in Indigenous Community–Mining Company Relations, Northern Chile // Sally Babidge
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https://t.co/MeqGspWhPK
New Article!
Authors Nanette Liberona Concha, Romina Ramos Rodríguez, @semantema, & Marioly Corona Ramírez on the forced displacement of Venezuelan migrants & COVID-19 border + health control in Chile.
Read here ➡️ https://t.co/8YLHHR19B1
Antonio José Bacelar da Silva (@uarizona) & Erika Robb Larkins (@SDSU) consider Jair Bolsonaro's 2018 election through the lens of antiblackness + Deleuzian theory.
Revisit here ⬇️
https://t.co/3mbaT9SBqj
El Departamento de Sociología y Antropología busca reclutar un antropólogo/a con especialidad en el Caribe, que pueda colaborar con @caribbeanstudi2 del @IECICSUPR. Convocatoria de interés para @JournalLatin@El_Icanh@MNdAntropologia entre otros. Enlace: https://t.co/HxRGfqDWjv
Compartimos el artículo "Maps’ agency and mountains’ multiplicity: Conflicts triggered by state maps involving pilgrims and desired mining futures in the Andes" escrito por nuestro docente Guillermo Salas. El texto fue publicado en @JournalLatin.
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https://t.co/crLyF5ceNQ
Don't miss our newest article on state map-making & conflicts between rural communities, pilgrims, and state institutions.
Here ⬇️
https://t.co/h7YifKzlxS
📚📚 From the Archives 📚 📚
Revisit Fabiana Li's (@FabianaLiAnthro) 2016 article, "In Defense of Water: Modern Mining, Grassroots Movements, and Corporate Strategies in Peru"
Here ⬇️
https://t.co/LY16z7fcaU https://t.co/EJiXmMzywx
Revisit one of our most-cited articles:
"Sacrificing Indigenous Bodies and Lands: The Political–Economic History of Lowland Bolivia in Light of the Recent TIPNIS Debate" by Nicole Fabricant (@nikifab77) & Nancy Postero.
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https://t.co/osYtoZoEnr
In one of our most-read articles, @MaraDicenta & Ana Cecilia Gerrard consider "liminal governance" along the Argentine coastline of Tierra del Fuego’s main island.
Read here ⬇️
https://t.co/EpZriyyG9X