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dc.creatorHarrison, Faye V.-
dc.date2018-04-30-
dc.date.accessioned2022-03-17T14:13:09Z-
dc.date.available2022-03-17T14:13:09Z-
dc.identifierhttps://periodicos.unb.br/index.php/abya/article/view/10696-
dc.identifier10.26512/abyayala.v2i1.10696-
dc.identifier.urihttp://biblioteca-repositorio.clacso.edu.ar/handle/CLACSO/37900-
dc.descriptionProtests against the Dakota Access Pipeline led by water protectors from the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe in North Dakota have brought human rights violations related to Indigenous sovereignty, environmental justice, and sustainable development into the foreground of political debate in the United States. The struggle at Standing Rock has been strengthened by a coalition formed with activists from other Indigenous Nations, including representatives from the Amazon Basin, and from non-Indigenous movements and political organizations such as the Green Party and #BlackLivesMatter. This article reflects upon the centrality of Indigenous Sovereignty within the broader struggle for human rights and democracy in their most inclusive and substantive senses, especially in societies whose development has been built upon the violence of colonial expansion, white supremacy, and heteropatriarchy. The article also situates Indigenous rights within regimes of multiple articulated alterities in which the subjugation and dispossession of Indigenous and Afro-descendant peoples have been historically differentiated yet intertwined in the Americas. The article offers a multi-sited framework for understanding the convergent and divergent points of reference in the logics of Indigenous and Afro-descendant identity, the relationship with the State and Market, and connections to the material and spiritual resources of land. Attention is directed to cases in the United States, Honduras, and Suriname (including those of communities that define themselves as “Afro-Indigenous”) in which some notion of common ground, affinity, or alliance with past or present-day Indigenous peoples has been mobilized in Afro-descendants’ collective claims on rights to land, development, and cultural resources.en-US
dc.descriptionRESUMEN EN ESPAÑOL: Protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline led by water protectors from the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe in North Dakota have brought human rights violations related to Indigenous sovereignty, environmental justice, and sustainable development into the foreground of political debate in the United States. The struggle at Standing Rock has been strengthened by a coalition formed with activists from other Indigenous Nations, including representatives from the Amazon Basin, and from non-Indigenous movements and political organizations such as the Green Party and #BlackLivesMatter.  This article reflects upon the centrality of Indigenous Sovereignty within the broader struggle for human rights and democracy in their most inclusive and substantive senses, especially in societies whose development has been built upon the violence of colonial expansion, white supremacy, and heteropatriarchy.  The article also situates Indigenous rights within regimes of multiple articulated alterities in which the subjugation and dispossession of Indigenous and Afro-descendant peoples have been historically differentiated yet intertwined in the Americas.  The article offers a multi-sited framework for understanding the convergent and divergent points of reference in the logics of Indigenous and Afro-descendant identity, the relationship with the State and Market, and connections to the material and spiritual resources of land.  Attention is directed to cases in the United States, Honduras, and Suriname (including those of communities that define themselves as “Afro-Indigenous”) in which some notion of common ground, affinity, or alliance with past or present-day Indigenous peoples has been mobilized in Afro-descendants’ collective claims on rights to land, development, and cultural resources.  es-ES
dc.descriptionProtests against the Dakota Access Pipeline led by water protectors from the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe in North Dakota have brought human rights violations related to Indigenous sovereignty, environmental justice, and sustainable development into the foreground of political debate in the United States. The struggle at Standing Rock has been strengthened by a coalition formed with activists from other Indigenous Nations, including representatives from the Amazon Basin, and from non-Indigenous movements and political organizations such as the Green Party and #BlackLivesMatter. This article reflects upon the centrality of Indigenous Sovereignty within the broader struggle for human rights and democracy in their most inclusive and substantive senses, especially in societies whose development has been built upon the violence of colonial expansion, white supremacy, and heteropatriarchy. The article also situates Indigenous rights within regimes of multiple articulated alterities in which the subjugation and dispossession of Indigenous and Afro-descendant peoples have been historically differentiated yet intertwined in the Americas. The article offers a multi-sited framework for understanding the convergent and divergent points of reference in the logics of Indigenous and Afro-descendant identity, the relationship with the State and Market, and connections to the material and spiritual resources of land. Attention is directed to cases in the United States, Honduras, and Suriname (including those of communities that define themselves as “Afro-Indigenous”) in which some notion of common ground, affinity, or alliance with past or present-day Indigenous peoples has been mobilized in Afro-descendants’ collective claims on rights to land, development, and cultural resources.pt-BR
dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.languageeng-
dc.publisherUniversidade de Brasíliapt-BR
dc.relationhttps://periodicos.unb.br/index.php/abya/article/view/10696/9395-
dc.rightsCopyright (c) 2018 Abya-yala: Revista sobre Acesso à Justiça e Direitos nas Américaspt-BR
dc.rightshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0pt-BR
dc.sourceAbya-Yala: Journal on Access to Justice and Rights in the Americas; Vol. 2 No. 1 (2018): PROCESOS DE RESISTENCIA, DERECHOS COLECTIVOS Y DESPOJO DE LOS BIENES COMUNES EN EL NEOLIBERALISMO; 70-89en-US
dc.sourceAbya-Yala: Revista sobre Acceso a la justicia y derechos en las Américas; Vol. 2 Núm. 1 (2018): PROCESOS DE RESISTENCIA, DERECHOS COLECTIVOS Y DESPOJO DE LOS BIENES COMUNES EN EL NEOLIBERALISMO; 70-89es-ES
dc.sourceAbya-yala: Revista sobre Acesso à Justiça e Direitos nas Américas; v. 2 n. 1 (2018): PROCESOS DE RESISTENCIA, DERECHOS COLECTIVOS Y DESPOJO DE LOS BIENES COMUNES EN EL NEOLIBERALISMO; 70-89pt-BR
dc.source2526-6675-
dc.source10.26512/abya-yala.v2i1-
dc.subjecthuman rightspt-BR
dc.subjectindigenouspt-BR
dc.subjectdemocracypt-BR
dc.subjectsupremacypt-BR
dc.subjectheteropatriarchypt-BR
dc.subjecthuman rightsen-US
dc.subjectindigenousen-US
dc.subjectdemocracyen-US
dc.subjectsupremacyen-US
dc.subjectheteropatriarchyen-US
dc.subjectderechos humanoses-ES
dc.subjectindigenases-ES
dc.subjectdemocracuaes-ES
dc.subjectsupremaciaes-ES
dc.subjectheteropatriarcadoes-ES
dc.titleFrom Standing Rock to flint and beyond: resisting neoliberal assaults on indigenous, maroon, and other sites of racially subjected community sustainability in the Americasen-US
dc.titleDe Standing Rock a la pedernal y más allá: resistir los asaltos neoliberales contra indígenas, granates y otros sitios de sostenibilidad de la comunidad sometida racialmente en las Américas.es-ES
dc.titleFrom Standing Rock to flint and beyond: resisting neoliberal assaults on indigenous, maroon, and other sites of racially subjected community sustainability in the Americaspt-BR
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article-
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion-
dc.typepeer revieweden-US
dc.typeRevisado por pareses-ES
dc.typeAvaliado pelos parespt-BR
Aparece en las colecciones: ELA - Departamento de Estudos Latino-Americanos - Cosecha

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