Anthropologica. Vol. 28 Núm. 28 (2010) Suplemento

URI permanente para esta colecciónhttp://54.81.141.168/handle/123456789/178971

Tabla de Contenido


Testimonios para la historia de la antropología
  • Encuentros y desencuentros entre mundos distintos: minería y poblaciones rurales Ossio, Juan; 311-330

  • Reseñas
  • DAMONTE, Gerardo H. The Constitution of Political Actors. Peasant Communities, Mining, and Mobilization in Bolivian and Peruvian Andes. Saarbrücken-Berlin: VDM Verlag, 2008, 349 pp. Bravo Frey, Mireya; 331-334
  • GIL, Vladimir. Aterrizaje minero:cultura, conflicto, negociaciones y lecciones para el desarrollo desde la minería en Ancash, Perú. Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, 2009. Calderón, Jorge; 335-338
  • Chirif, Alberto y Manuel Cornejo Chaparro (eds.). Imaginario e imágenes de la época del caucho: los sucesos del Putumayo. Lima :CAAAP, 2009 Belaunde, Luisa Elvira; 339-344
  • DE ECHAVE, José; Alejandro DIEZ; Ludwig HUBER; Bruno REVESZ; Xavier RICARD LANATA y Martín TANAKA. Minería y conflicto social. Lima: CBC, CIPCA, CIES, IEP, 2009.424 pp. Barrio de Mendoza, Rafael; 345-347
  • SALAS CARREÑO, Guillermo. Dinámica social y minería. Familias pastoras de puna y la presencia del proyecto Antamina (1997-2002). Lima: IEP, 2008. 409 pp. Málaga Sabogal, Ximena; 348-350

  • Industrias extractivas y sociedad rural
  • Presentación: una mirada antropológica a las industrias extractivas en los Andes Damonte, Gerardo; Castillo, Gerardo; 5-19
  • Bultos, selladores y gringos alados: percepciones indígenas de la violencia capitalista en la Amazonía peruana Santos Granero, Fernando; Barclay, Federica; 21-52
  • Minería, instituciones y sostenibilidad: desencuentros y desafíos Bebbington, Anthony J; Bury, Jeffrey T; 53-84
  • Poder, comunidades campesinas e industria minera: el gobierno comunal y el acceso a los recursos en el caso de Michiquillay* Burneo, María Luisa; Chaparro Ortiz de Zevallos, Anahí; 85-110
  • La embriaguez del canon minero. La política distrital en San Marcos a doce años de la presencia de Antamina* Salas Carreño, Guillermo; 111-138
  • Conflictos del gas y su gobernanza: el caso de los guaraníes de Tarija, Bolivia. Perreault, Thomas; 139-162
  • Articulación campesina al mercado: el caso de Putinza (valle medio del río Cañete, Lima) Rodríguez Castillón, Juan; 163-181
  • Cuando la empresa se instala, el «diablo» se muda a vivir en los socavones* Salazar-Soler, Carmen; 183-215
  • Re-empaquetando el CLPI: las conexiones globales y el debate sobre el consentimiento indígena para la extracción industrial de recursos Szablowski, David; 217-238
  • Cambios y continuidades en la percepción y demandas indígenas sobre el territorio en la Amazonía peruana Espinosa, Óscar; 239-262

  • Opinión
  • Industrias extractivas, protesta indígena y consulta en la Amazonía peruana Benavides, Margarita; 263-287
  • Los achuares del Corrientes: el Estado ante su propio paradigma Chirif, Alberto; 289-309
  • Explorar

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    Mostrando 1 - 2 de 2
    • Ítem
      Poder, comunidades campesinas e industria minera: el gobierno comunal y el acceso a los recursos en el caso de Michiquillay*
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2010-03-26) Burneo, María Luisa; Chaparro Ortiz de Zevallos, Anahí
      This paper analyzes changes in community governance in the contextof negotiations with a mining company. We focus on three issues:the role played by the community government on the regulation ofcommunity resources and territory, the diverse and complex intereststhat emerge in the presence of mining activity; and, the communityas a political institution confronting external pressures over its land.We develop a study case focusing on the negotiation process betweenthe Michiquillay peasant community and Anglo American MiningCompany in Cajamarca, Peru. This information was obtained doingfieldwork in the community in 2009. In our analysis we observe thatchanges on community resources regulation, its uses and valorization,as well as changes on the balance of power between economicand political actors, have created a greater level of complexity in thecommunity, creating new levels of community decision and spaces fordisputing resources’ control. At the same time, new inter communalconflicts emerge and fragmentation of community lands increases.In this context the community as an institution plays a central rolein the negotiation process over access productive resource and thedistribution of financial capital.
    • Ítem
      Minería, instituciones y sostenibilidad: desencuentros y desafíos
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2010-03-26) Bebbington, Anthony J.; Bury, Jeffrey T.
      Global consumption continues to generate growth in mining. In lesserdeveloped economies, this growth offers the potential to generate newresources for development, but also creates challenges to sustainabilityin the regions in which extraction occurs. This context leads todebate on the institutional arrangements most likely to build synergiesbetween mining, livelihoods, and development, and on the socio-politicalconditions under which such institutions can emerge. Buildingfrom a multiyear, three country program of research projects, Peru, aglobal center of mining expansion, serves as an exemplar for analyzingthe effects of extractive industry on livelihoods and the conditionsunder which arrangements favoring local sustainability might emerge.This program is guided by three emergent hypotheses in human environmentalsciences regarding the relationships among institutions,knowledge, learning, and sustainability. The research combines indepthand comparative case study analysis, and uses mapping andspatial analysis, surveys, in-depth interviews, participant observation,and our own direct participation in public debates on the regulation ofmining for development. The findings demonstrate the pressures thatmining expansion has placed on water resources, livelihood assets,and social relationships. These pressures are a result of institutionalconditions that separate the governance of mineral expansion, waterresources, and local development, and of relationships of power thatprioritize large scale investment over livelihood and environment. Afurther problem is the poor communication between mining sectorknowledge systems and those of local populations. These results areconsistent with themes recently elaborated in sustainability science.