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La relación entre los pueblos indígenas de la Amazonia con el estado Peruano desde la perspectiva de los indígenas awajún de Huampami

By: GANOZA, Silvia Ordóñez.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: Stockholm : Institute of Latin Amercian Studies, Stockholm University, 2013Online resources: Acesso Iberoamericana: nordic journal of latin american and caribbean studies 43, 1-2, p. 67-90Abstract: In June 2009, the Indigenous Peoples (IPs) of the Peruvian Amazonia mobilizedAbstract: to get the fully-fledged recognition of their rights to land ownership andAbstract: possession and to consultation, etc. In the clashes which followed between theAbstract: police and the IPs the violence exploded taking a heavy toll of victims. AfterAbstract: three years, despite the adoption by President Ollanta Humala of the Law onAbstract: the “Prior Consultation to Indigenous or Native Peoples” in September 2011, inAbstract: which the right to consultation is enshrined yet the conflict is still ongoing.In this frame, there is a need to identify and comprehend directly the opinion of the protagonists in order to grasp what is actually happening on the ground and the stark realities IPs are facing on a daily basis. Thus, a number of testimonies of the Awuajún IPs from the city of Huampami - Amazonian Region (Perú) are analyzed in this paper. The aim is to assess the relation between the Amazonian IPs and the Peruvian State, as well as the main features that may result from this relation
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In June 2009, the Indigenous Peoples (IPs) of the Peruvian Amazonia mobilized

to get the fully-fledged recognition of their rights to land ownership and

possession and to consultation, etc. In the clashes which followed between the

police and the IPs the violence exploded taking a heavy toll of victims. After

three years, despite the adoption by President Ollanta Humala of the Law on

the “Prior Consultation to Indigenous or Native Peoples” in September 2011, in

which the right to consultation is enshrined yet the conflict is still ongoing.In this frame, there is a need to identify and comprehend directly the opinion of the protagonists in order to grasp what is actually happening on the ground and the stark realities IPs are facing on a daily basis. Thus, a number of testimonies of the Awuajún IPs from the city of Huampami - Amazonian Region (Perú) are analyzed in this paper. The aim is to assess the relation between the Amazonian IPs and the Peruvian State, as well as the main features that may result from this relation

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