It is very unusual to find a study that tackles the question of indigenous titling across different macro regions of the world (Latin America, Africa, and Southeast Asia) as this one does, and even more unusual to find a work that does so with a clear theoretical argument about the drivers of titling. Running against the grain of much work in this area, Altamirano Rayo shows why and how indigenous land titling can happen in concert with state interests (and sometimes at state initiative), and how it can limit indigenous autonomy while reinforcing the advantages and prerogatives of the state. The book is an impressive achievement that will widen policy and theoretical debates on this topic.

Catherine Boone, London School of Economics

This book offers a thorough testing of the theory of state control in relation to titling of Indigenous lands. Altamirano Rayo's argument that by granting land titles to Indigenous communities, the authorities curb the internal threat to state sovereignty is significant and has not been studied in such detail previously. Another merit is the extensive and at times very revealing interview material with high-ranking administrators and officials which overall contributes greatly to the depth of the analysis in the book.

Rauna Kuokkanen, University of Lapland

Why and how do some countries title Indigenous lands in some places, and at certain times, but not others? What accounts for the selective implementation of Indigenous people's collective land and natural resource rights? Conventional accounts hold that transnational activism and bottom-up social movements push Indigenous land titling. Other commonly held views are that economic interests and state weakness block these efforts. Giorleny Altamiro Rayo shows Indigenous land titling is neither random nor methodical. Rather, she argues that state elites are motivated to title Indigenous lands to ensure internal order and reinforce the state's territorial power in remote regions. Rayo unveils how state elites reshape Indigenous peoples' ancestral land claims and transform pre-existing property institutions into a governing mechanism akin to indirect rule. By titling Indigenous lands, state elites create new institutional arrangements in property that allows for the subordination, monitoring, and management of Indigenous society. The broad implication is that state elites subject people that self-identify as Indigenous to a new hierarchical system that perpetuates their political dependency and socioeconomic marginalization. Altamirano Rayo leverages original data from three Latin American countries (Brazil, Honduras, and Nicaragua) and two additional countries of the Global South (Indonesia and Kenya) to propose the theory and test its reach, using a combination of quantitative analysis and comparative case studies of six subnational regions since the 1980s. Rayo develops a new framework to understand the speed and territorial patterns of Indigenous land titling, and invites readers to rethink much of the conventional wisdom about the causes and effects of Indigenous land and natural resource rights allocation.
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List of Tables, Figures, and Maps Preface PART I: THEORETICAL FRAMING Chapter 2: Communal Property Rights of Indigenous Peoples and Ethnic Groups: Their Country-Specific Shape Chapter 3: The Argument: The Crucial Role of State Interests PART II: THE POLITICS OF INDIGENOUS LAND TITLING IN THE AMERICAS Chapter 4: Nicaragua: Once Bitten, Twice Shy: Titling for Internal Order Conclusion Chapter 5: Honduras: Mine not Yours: Indigenous Land Titling to Recover the Eastern Territory Chapter 6: Brazil: On My Terms: Creating Indigenous Lands to Control the Borderlands Limitations of Extant Approaches PART III: CONCLUSION Chapter 7: New Ethnic Communal Property Regimes: The Devil is in the Details: Legal Implementation, International Norms, and State-Building in the Americas Appendices Bibliography
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"It is very unusual to find a study that tackles the question of indigenous titling across different macro regions of the world (Latin America, Africa, and Southeast Asia) as this one does, and even more unusual to find a work that does so with a clear theoretical argument about the drivers of titling. Running against the grain of much work in this area, Altamirano Rayo shows why and how indigenous land titling can happen in concert with state interests (and sometimes at state initiative), and how it can limit indigenous autonomy while reinforcing the advantages and prerogatives of the state. The book is an impressive achievement that will widen policy and theoretical debates on this topic." -- Catherine Boone, London School of Economics "This book offers a thorough testing of the theory of state control in relation to titling of Indigenous lands. Altamirano Rayo's argument that by granting land titles to Indigenous communities, the authorities curb the internal threat to state sovereignty is significant and has not been studied in such detail previously. Another merit is the extensive and at times very revealing interview material with high-ranking administrators and officials which overall contributes greatly to the depth of the analysis in the book." -- Rauna Kuokkanen, University of Lapland
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Giorleny Altamirano Rayo is an Instructor in the Heinz College of Information Systems and Public Policy at Carnegie Mellon University. She is a lawyer, political scientist, and applied researcher interested in property rights, natural resource management, and political-economic development issues in Latin America in a comparative perspective. Her work has been funded by Fulbright, the National Science Foundation, Carnegie Mellon University, the University of Texas at Austin, and Vanderbilt University. She is the author of numerous articles about the Global South and also the translator of original work about historical and contemporary Latin American politics. In addition to her scholarly work, she serves as a Chief Data Scientist and Responsible AI Official at the United States Department of State, served as a diplomat in the Nicaraguan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and as an applied researcher at Vanderbilt University. She has been working and conducting research in and about the Global South for over fifteen years. The views expressed in this and other works are her own and not necessarily those of the U.S. Government and the U.S. Department of State.
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Selling point: Includes 110 original interviews with former and sitting presidents and former and sitting military strategists Selling point: Features data from original surveys administered to representatives of the national legislatures in Brazil and Nicaragua and middle and high-ranking military officers enrolled in post-graduate level courses at the Defense University of Honduras Selling point: land rights and also how government officials operate in titled Indigenous territory
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780197770863
Publisert
2025-02-04
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
590 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
19 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
272

Om bidragsyterne

Giorleny Altamirano Rayo is an Instructor in the Heinz College of Information Systems and Public Policy at Carnegie Mellon University. She is a lawyer, political scientist, and applied researcher interested in property rights, natural resource management, and political-economic development issues in Latin America in a comparative perspective. Her work has been funded by Fulbright, the National Science Foundation, Carnegie Mellon University, the University of Texas at Austin, and Vanderbilt University. She is the author of numerous articles about the Global South and also the translator of original work about historical and contemporary Latin American politics. In addition to her scholarly work, she serves as a Chief Data Scientist and Responsible AI Official at the United States Department of State, served as a diplomat in the Nicaraguan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and as an applied researcher at Vanderbilt University. She has been working and conducting research in and about the Global South for over fifteen years. The views expressed in this and other works are her own and not necessarily those of the U.S. Government and the U.S. Department of State.