【ネオリベラルなグローバリゼーションの代替としての「よく生きる」】
Vivir Bien as an Alternative to Neoliberal Globalization (Rethinking Globalizations)
Ranta, Eija 著
目次
Contents 1. Introduction: Vivir Bien as a post-neoliberal alternative in the global world Bolivia’s indigenous alternative to universalist development modelsFollowing the notion of Vivir BienSynopsis of the book 2. Towards decolonial government Policy-making, state formation, and powerGovernment as a field of powerArticulations of ruleIndigenous self-governance, lands and territoriesArticulating indigeneity Coloniality, racism, and the decolonial option Vivir Bien: Towards more heterodox political economy? 3. Indigenous resistance struggles, coloniality of the state and the capitalist world-system: A historical view Colonial governance and the making of racial differences Struggles between liberal and communal practicesThe nationalist revolution and the uprising of katarismoThe global flow of indigenous ideasThe neoliberal turn Multicultural policy reforms in the 1990sThe evolvement of the MAS as a political instrument 4. Contested meanings of Vivir Bien Suma Qamana as cultural differencePromoting indigenous self-determinationVivir Bien in state development policies Decolonizing indigenous policy?Counteracting ‘neoliberal colonialism’Recent policy formulations Indigenous elements in the constitution 5. "Colonialism strikes back": Vivir Bien as bureaucratic practice and technical expertise The making of sectoral plansThe depoliticization of Vivir Bien Micropractices of power in the practice of governmentThe critique of technical expertise by aid agenciesTechnicalizing indigenous expertiseYoung consultants as brokers of policy knowledge 6. Bureaucracy as a disciplinary power The opposition of public servantsAre public servants neutral?Racial orders under threatCo-opting social movementsDisciplining the massesCentralization of state power 7. In the name of Vivir Bien: Legitimizing extractive conflicts? Elite co-option of autonomy discourses Bypassing indigenous self-determination Towards resource nationalismExtractive conflicts: The case of TIPNISSocialist environmentalism or reconstituted neoliberalism? 8. Concluding remarks Decolonial government The state and neoliberalism Epilogue
カート
カートに商品は入っていません。