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ID123929
Title ProperBridging identity divides in current rural social mobilisation
LanguageENG
AuthorWald, Nave
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The shift from a corporatist citizenship regime to a neoliberal one has adversely affected Latin American rural communities and led to widespread social mobilisation and organisation in the countryside. The struggle of such marginalised communities has been often framed by stressing their indigenous collective identity over the previously prevalent class-based peasant identity. This article focuses on the role of identity and the negotiation of different identities in the struggle of two rural organisations in Northwest Argentina for securing land tenure and improving their standards of living. Argentinean society, in contrast to some other Latin American societies, is often imagined as 'white,' but in recent decades many peasant, or campesino, communities have rediscovered or reaffirmed their indigenous origin. This article therefore deconstructs rural collective identities in Argentina and analyses how class and ethnic identities are negotiated in struggles of grassroots social organisations in the countryside of this predominantly urban country.
`In' analytical NoteIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 20, No.5; Oct 2013: p.598-615
Journal SourceIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 20, No.5; Oct 2013: p.598-615
Key WordsIdentity Politics ;  Rural Identities ;  Peasants ;  Indigenous People ;  Argentina ;  Social Movements