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Frayba

Amenazas e intento de muerte a campesinos en Las Margaritas, Chiapas

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Indígenas Tojolabales del poblado Primero de Agosto, en las Margaritas Chiapas, denuncian provocaciones, ataques, amenazas e intentos de muerte por parte de integrantes de la Central Independiente de Obreros Agrícolas y Campesinos CIOAC Histórica y de la Alianza de Organizaciones Sociales y Sindicatos de Izquierda (ASSI) del Ejido Miguel Hidalgo. Campesinas y campesinos responsabilizan a los representantes ejidales y al gobierno de la entidad por las agresiones intensificadas desde agosto de 2013.

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Frayba

Minerva: 18 años de exigencia de justicia, 18 años de impunidad


Adaptación en audio: Azul Cordo, de texto de Alejandro Aldana.

El 20 de junio de 1996, Minerva Guadalupe Pérez Torres, indígena chól y quien entonces tenía 19 años, desapareció en la comunidad Miguel Alemán, del municipio de Tila, Chiapas, cuando el transporte público en el que viajaba fue interceptado por Sabelino Torres, dirigente del grupo paramilitar “Paz y Justicia” quien ordenara la retención de Minerva, y desde entonces se desconoce su paradero.

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Centro de Derechos Humanos Fray Bartolomé de Las Casas

Noti Frayba: Vigilancia y hostigamiento a defensores y defensoras de derechos humanos

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El Centro de Derechos Humanos Fray Bartolomé de Las Casas, acusa acciones de vigilancia y hostigamiento a sus integrantes, así como a otras organizaciones de la sociedad civil, por agentes de inteligencia del estado mexicano, durante los meses de abril y mayo, en San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Chiapas.

El Frayba, interpuso denuncia ante la Fiscalía Especializada de Protección y Atención a los Organismos No Gubernamentales para la Defensa de los Derechos Humanos por actos de seguimiento y vigilancia.

Estos hechos han sido notificados a la Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos, a través de las medidas cautelares que este Centro tiene ante el organismo internacional. El Frayba exige al gobierno mexicano cumpla con su obligación de tomar las medidas necesarias para que quienes defienden derechos humanos ejerzan su labor sin ningún tipo de amenaza ni violencia en contra.

Centro de Derechos Humanos Fray Bartolomé de Las Casas. San Cristóbal de Las Casas Chiapas. 16 de junio de 2014.

Leer: http://www.frayba.org.mx/archivo/boletines/140613_boletin_19_hostigamiento_frayba.pdf

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Comisión de Comunicación - Jornada por la Autonomía "David Ruiz García"

Invitación: Jornada por la Autonomía “David Ruiz García”

Sábado, 21 de junio
Espacio Wapani, Flavio Paniagua #10

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Radio Zapatista

Bienvenidxs a La Realidad

Resumen sonoro del Homenaje al Votán Galeano (José Luis Solís López ) en La Realidad, Chiapas, México. Audios tomados de Los Medios Libres que acudieron al Encuentro/Homenaje/Relevo Colectivo zapatista este 24 de mayo de 2014, en el corazón de la resistencia zapatista mexicana. Música: “El Tren”, Rastrillos y “Marco’s Hall”, de Panteón Rococó.

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Foto: Marta Molina para los Medios Libres, Alternativos, Autónomos o como se llamen.

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Congreso Nacional Indígena

Pronunciamiento del CNI sobre el compa David Ruiz García

PRONUNCIAMIENTO DEL CONGRESO NACIONAL INDÍGENA

Defender la alegría como una trinchera
Defenderla del caos y de las pesadillas
De la ajada miseria y de los miserables
De las ausencias breves y de las definitivas
Mario Benedetti

A LOS PUEBLOS DEL MUNDO
A LA ZEZTA INTERNACIONAL
A LOS COMPAÑEROS DE LA SEXTA
A LA FAMILIA Y AMIGOS DE DAVID RUIZ GARCÍA

Nosotros, los Pueblos, Naciones, Tribus y Barrios indígenas de México que estamos construyendo una casa que llamamos Congreso Nacional Indígena, les queremos comunicar que hemos acudido –como dijo uno de sus familiares- a Sembrar en la Tierra a nuestro hermano DAVID RUIZ GARCÍA, en su respetado y querido pueblo ñhañú de San Francisco Xochicuautla, municipio de Lerma en el Estado de México;

Nosotros, los que fuimos testigos de la voluntad de David Ruiz García para unirse al ¡YA BASTA ¡ zapatista, y al ¡Nunca Más un México sin Nosotros¡ de los pueblos originarios de México; estamos de luto, al igual que los compañeros de la Sexta;

Nosotros, que regresábamos -junto con él- a nuestras comunidades con fortaleza y alegría, por haber cumplido el encargo de nuestros pueblos de ir a la Realidad, Chiapas, a abrazar a los familiares y amigos del Compa Galeano, quien fue asesinado cobardemente por paramilitares que pagan los malos gobiernos; y que en ese retorno murió accidentalmente nuestro Compa David quien contagiaba con sus ganas de seguir la lucha contra el neoliberalismo;

Nosotras las mujeres, hermanas de lucha del Congreso Nacional Indígena, con mucho dolor pero también con gran corazón, hacemos llegar hasta otras geografías: el reconocimiento a la lucha de un pueblo digno como lo es Xochicuautla, donde sus jóvenas y jóvenes como DAVID, iniciaron desde abajo, el camino por la vida y la construcción de un mundo mejor;

Nosotros, hermanos y hermanas ,compañeros y amigos del Compa David, agrupados en el Congreso Nacional Indígena, que sabíamos de su carácter y de la convicción por cambiar este sistema de explotación, de opresión, de racismo, de desigualdad. Por su firme deseo de construir un mundo nuevo donde la alegría fuera uno de sus principales pilares, donde la alegría superara a toda tristeza;
Nosotras, nosotros que sabemos del dolor profundo que causa la pérdida de un hijo; nieto; sobrino; hermano; primo; amigo; compañero, deseamos hacer llegar a la familia, amigos, amigas y conocidos de nuestro hermano David el siguiente

PRONUNCIAMIENTO

Primero:- Uniéndonos al dolor de los familiares, hemos traído a nuestros pueblos las flores que cientos de personas llevaron como tributo para a la tumba de DAVID RUIZ GARCÍA, con el compromiso de continuar con la Defensa de la Madre Tierra; y en Defensa de la Alegría; nos unimos al pesar que tienen los amigos, compañeras y compañeros de David, Los Hijos del Maíz , los del Coro, y tantos que lo reconocen como una luz en las tinieblas;

Segundo.- Que haremos todo nuestro esfuerzo para que los resolutivos y acuerdos que tengamos en la Compartición entre Congreso Nacional Indígena y Pueblos Zapatistas “Compañero David Ruiz García” para realizarse del 4 al 9 de Agosto de este año 2014, en la Realidad, Chiapas, lleven la convicción en la lucha, la fuerza de la juventud y alegría que regalaba David;

Tercero.- Nosotros, nosotras nos comprometemos a que la lucha del pueblo de San Francisco Xochicuatla y de los pueblos vecinos que están por la defensa de su Tierra, Territorio, Bosque y Agua, también es, y será, nuestra lucha. Siendo éste el mejor homenaje que podemos rendir a nuestro hermano David Ruiz García. Porque :

DAVID RUIZ GARCÍA ¡ VIVE ¡

POR LA RECONSTITUCIÓN INTEGRAL DE NUESTROS PUEBLOS
NUNCA MÁS UN MÉXICO SIN NOSOTROS
CONGRESO NACIONAL INDÍGENA

San Francisco Xochicuautla, Lerma, Estado de México
Junio de 2014

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Manuela Picq

Autodeterminación como antiextractivismo: la resistencia indígena desafía las políticas mundiales

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Self-Determination as Anti-Extractivism: How Indigenous Resistance Challenges World Politics Print
Written by Manuela Picq
Monday, 02 June 2014 19:46
This article was originally published in E-International Relations’ free-to-download Edited Collection, Restoring Indigenous Self Determination: Theoretical and Practical Approaches. Republished under a Creative Commons License.

Indigeneity is an unusual way to think about International Relations (IR). Most studies of world politics ignore Indigenous perspectives, which are rarely treated as relevant to thinking about the international (Shaw 2008; Beier 2009). Yet Indigenous peoples are engaging in world politics with a dynamism and creativity that defies the silences of our discipline (Morgan 2011). In Latin America, Indigenous politics has gained international legitimacy, influencing policy for over two decades (Cott 2008; Madrid 2012). Now, Indigenous political movements are focused on resisting extractive projects on autonomous territory from the Arctic to the Amazon (Banerjee 2012; Sawyer and Gómez 2012). Resistance has led to large mobilized protests, invoked international law, and enabled alternative mechanisms of authority. In response, governments have been busy criminalizing Indigenous claims to consultation that challenge extractive models of development. Indigenous opposition to extractivism ultimately promotes self-determination rights, questioning the states’ authority over land by placing its sovereignty into historical context. In that sense, Indigeneity is a valuable approach to understanding world politics as much as it is a critical concept to move beyond state-centrism in the study of IR.

The Consolidation of Indigenous Resistance against Extractivism

Indigenous peoples are contesting extractive projects in various, complementary ways. Collective marches have multiplied as an immediate means of resistance throughout the Americas. In 2012, the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador led thousands of people on a 15-day, 400-mile March for Life, Water, and the Dignity of Peoples, demanding a new water law, the end of open-pit mining, and a stop to the expansion of oil concessions. Within days, a similar mobilization took over Guatemala City. The Indigenous, Peasant, and Popular March in Defense of Mother Earth covered 212 kilometers to enter the capital with nearly 15,000 people protesting mining concessions, hydroelectric plants, and evictions. In Bolivia, various marches demanded consultation as the government prepared to build a highway within the Indigenous Territory and National Park Isidoro Sécure (TIPNIS). From Canada’s Idle No More movement to the protests against damming the Xingú River Basin in Brazil, Indigenous movements are rising and demanding they be allowed to participate in decisions affecting their territories.

Protests are at the core of global Indigenous agendas. In 2013, the Fifth Continental Summit of Indigenous Peoples of the Abya Yala encouraged communities to step-up resistance in light of the threat posed by state-sponsored extractivism. This is what Indigenous women were doing when they walked from Amazon territories to Quito, Ecuador, denouncing government plans to drill without consultation in the Yasuní reserve. Local protests are not trivial or irrelevant in world politics. Rather, they are part of a larger effort to transform local concerns into international politics.

Indigenous peoples have remarkable expertise in international law and are savvily leveraging their rights to consultation and self-determination guaranteed in the ILO Convention 169 (1989) and the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) (UN General Assembly 2008). They have won emblematic legal battles at the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR), at times obliging states to recognize Indigenous territorial authority. In the decade-long case of Sarayaku v. Ecuador, the IACHR upheld the right of free, prior, and informed consent with a binding sentence against the Ecuadoran State for allowing a foreign oil company to encroach on ancestral lands without consultation during the 1990s. A 2011 petition by communities of the Xingú River basin led the IACHR to order Brazil’s government to halt the construction of the Belo Monte Dam. The Mayan Q’eqchi’ expanded jurisdiction by taking Hudbay Minerals to Court in Canada for crimes committed at an open-pit nickel mine in Guatemala. In Canada, two Manitoba First Nations used their own legal systems in 2013 to serve eviction notices to mining companies operating illegally on their land.1

International pressure is significant, yet states frequently eschew what they perceive to be uncomfortable mechanisms of accountability. Courts may validate Indigenous resistance, and UN reports warn against the catastrophic impact of extractive industries, but Brazil continued to build the Belo Monte Dam and Peru’s government did not consider suspending the Camisea gas project of drilling 18 wells on protected territories that have been home to Amazonian peoples in voluntary isolation (Feather 2014). Nevertheless, states that evade prior consultation obligations only foster Indigenous inventiveness. In the absence of official mechanisms of consultation, people establish autonomous ones. Local communities of the Kimsacocha area took matters in their own hands after years of being ignored, demanding Ecuador’s government consult them on a mining project in the highlands. In 2011, they organized a community-based consultation without the authorization of the state that was nevertheless legitimized by the presence of international observers (Guartambel 2012). The community voted 93% in favour of defending water rights and against mining in the area. Autonomous forms of prior consultation are increasingly common in Latin America. In Guatemala alone, there have been over sixty community-based consultations since 2005 (MacLeod and Pérez 2013).

Contesting States of Extraction

Indigenous resistance has been the target of severe government repression, ranging from judicial intimidation to assassinations of activists. Mobilizations against the Congo mine in Cajamarca, Peru, led President Ollanta Humala to declare a state of emergency and unleash military repression. An estimated 200 activists were killed in Peru between 2006 and 2011 for resisting extractivism (Zibechi 2013). Colombia’s government, in turn, declared protests against the mining industry illegal. In Ecuador, about 200 people have been criminalized for contesting the corporatization of natural resources. Many have been charged with terrorism. Violent repression against TIPNIS protesters in Bolivia revealed that even Evo Morales, Latin America’s first elected Indigenous president, is willing to use force to silence demands for consultation. Various activists opposing the multinational mining giant AngloGlod Ashanti have been assassinated. Argentina’s Plurinational Indigenous Council, which calls for an end to extractivism, has recorded eleven assassinations since 2010. The Observatory of Mining Conflicts in Latin America (OCMAL) estimates there are currently 195 active conflicts due to large-scale mining. Peru and Chile lead the list with 34 and 33 conflicts respectively, followed by Mexico with 28, Argentina with 26, Brazil with 20, and Colombia with 12. Mega-mining alone affects nearly 300 communities, many of which are located on Indigenous territories.

This wave of intense criminalization indicates the expansion of the extractive frontier. In Peru, where anti-extractivist unrest toppled two cabinets under the Humala government and led to the militarization of several provinces, mineral exploration expenditures increased tenfold in a decade. In 2002, 7.5 million hectares of land had been granted to mining companies; by 2012 the figure jumped to almost 26 million hectares, or 20% of the country’s land. Nearly 60% of the province of Apurímac has been granted to mining companies. In Colombia, about 40% of land is licensed to, or being solicited by, multinational companies for mineral and crude mining projects (Peace Brigades International 2011). According to OCMAL, 25% of the Chile’s territory was under exploration or operation as of 2010. In 2013, Mexico’s government opened the state-controlled energy sector to foreign investment, changing legislation to allow private multinationals to prospect for the country’s oil and natural gas resources for the first time since 1938.

The problem is that governments are largely licensing Indigenous land. In 2010, the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues reported that Colombian mining concessions had been awarded in 80% of the country’s legally recognized Indigenous territories. Colombia’s government has 8.8 million hectares of Indigenous reserves designated as oil areas and granted 168 mining licenses on Indigenous reserves in 2011. Extractive industries lead to evictions, toxic waste, and resource scarcity, creating conflicts over water, soil, and subsoil. Open-pit mining uses unsustainable amounts of water. The controversial Marlin mine, partly funded by the World Bank in 2004, and today fully owned by Goldcorp, uses in one hour the water that a local family uses over 22 years (Van de Sandt 2009).2 In Chile, mining consumes 37% of the electricity produced in the country – which will reach 50% in a few years – compared to 28% for industry and 16% for the residential sector. This requires the Chilean State to continually expand energy sources, thereby accelerating displacement and the transfer of agricultural land to hydroelectric projects.

Conflicts against extractivism should not be dismissed as only concerning Indigenous peoples. They encompass larger debates about the role of extractivism in politics and contest a development model based on the corporatization of natural resources. In particular, they reveal the continuous role of resource exploitation as a strategy to finance states. Governments are prioritizing extractive industries as key engines of growth, although there is ample evidence that extractive industries create relatively few jobs. President Juan Manuel Santos promised to turn Colombia into a mining powerhouse because it attracts quick investment. Opening Ecuador to mega-mining financed much of President Correa’s third re-election. In fact, his unexpected policy shift to approve drilling within the Yasuní Reserve is explained largely by his government’s urgent need for cash. China, which holds over 35% of Ecuador’s foreign debt and financed 12% of its budget in 2013, buys about 60% of the country’s oil and is expected to pre-buy Yasuní oil (Guevara 2013).

Indigenous claims against extractive projects contest a world system based on predation and usurpation. In Guatemala, mining is managed by long-standing political elites and inscribed in the colonial genealogy of power. In many instances, the entrepreneurs promoting mining today are the scions of the same oligarchical families that have controlled Indigenous land and peoples for centuries (Casaús 2007). The political economy of extractivism encompasses global inequalities of exploitation, within and among states. About 75% of the world’s mining companies are registered in Canada, and most operate in the so-called Global South (Deneault et al. 2012). Extractive industries in the North rely on alliances with national elites to exploit natural resources of peoples and places historically marginalized from power politics.

Indigeneity as a Way to Rethink International Relations

Claims against extractivism are ultimately claims to the right of self-determination. The unilateral expropriation of land for mining today is a continuation of the Doctrine of Discovery. It conceptualized the New World as terra nullis, authorizing colonial powers to conquer and exploit land in the Americas. It also paved the way for a paradigm of domination that outlasted colonial times to evolve into a broader – and more resilient – self-arrogated right of intervention embodied by the modern state (Wallerstein 2006). Today, the idea of “empty” lands survives in extractivist practices. Large-scale mining by multinational corporations perpetuates the human abuse and resource appropriation initiated by Spanish colonizers centuries ago in the Bolivian mines of Potosi. International rights to self-determination may have replaced Papal Bulls, yet the political economy of looting natural resources on Indigenous lands continues, now in the name of development.

In this context, Indigeneity is a privileged site for the study of international relations. First and foremost, the extent and sophistication of Indigenous political praxis is relevant to any explanation of world politics. The rise of anti-extractivism as a politics of contestation against state exploitation calls for alternative sites of governance, such as the Inuit Circumpolar Council (Shadian 2013). Indigenous claims are shaping political practice, framing international legislation, and destabilizing assumptions about stateness. They seek the redistribution of rights as much as the uprooting of the concentration of power in the state. In that sense, Indigenous claims to consultation challenge the authority of states over natural resources as much as Westphalian forms of sovereignty.

Second, Indigeneity disrupts state sovereignty (Ryser 2012). The UNDRIP became the longest and most hotly debated human rights instrument in UN history because the expansion of Indigenous rights is intrinsically related to issues of state authority over territory. Rights to self-determination entail the recognition of plural forms of territorial authority in competition with states. Indigeneity is attributed to peoples who have historically been excluded from projects of state-making. Yet it contributes much more than making visible historically excluded groups. It refers to a politics that both precedes the state and lies outside of it. It is the constitutive “other” of the modern state, marked by a co-constitutive history that explains why Indigenous politics vary depending on different processes of state-formation. Consequently, Indigeneity is vital to a discipline dedicated to studying relations among states precisely because it is intrinsically related to state-formation. Standing outside of, and prior to, the state makes Indigenous standpoints valuable in terms of thinking critically about world politics and imagining what post-national political assemblages may look like (Sassen 2008).

Finally, Indigeneity is a strategic perspective in expanding scholarly debates on what constitutes IR. Indigenous experiences complement and broaden official national histories with forgotten or repressed narratives (O’Brien 2010), thus expanding methodological assumptions on how to do IR (Jackson 2010). Its precedence over the modern state encompasses alternative worldviews to think about the international beyond stateness. Indigeneity thus defies core epistemological foundations about power. In particular, it historicizes the state and sovereignty, moving away from Eurocentric conceptions of the world (Hobson 2012) and breaking with the discipline’s unreflective tendencies (Tickner 2013). The vibrancy of Indigenous struggles not only confirms the inadequacy of the state, echoing calls to provincialize Europe’s political legacies (Chakrabarty 2000), but it also provides concrete experiences of what the international can actually look like within and beyond the state (Tickner and Blaney 2013). Indigeneity is therefore doubly valuable for world politics. In addition to contributing alternative praxis of the international, it instigates critical theory to expand disciplinary borders.

Conclusion

Indigeneity is a valuable category of analysis for world politics. Indigenous experiences offer a fuller understanding of the world we live in. Integrating indigenous perspectives in the study of IR speaks to the ability to extend our political practice beyond the ivory tower. It is not a category of analysis that concerns merely Indigenous peoples, just as racism is not a matter for people of African descent only, or post-colonial studies the domain of previously colonized societies. The entire thrust of Indigeneity is that the non-state is the business of the state, and that there are alternative pathways available to decolonize the discipline.

Stripping IR of its state-centrism invites us to reflect upon the entrenched colonialism of international relations. Indigenous perspectives will hopefully inspire scholars to adventure beyond the conventional borders of the discipline. After all, opening an alternative locus of authority is nothing short of revolutionary.

Article originally published in E-IR’s free-to-download Edited Collection, Restoring Indigenous Self Determination: Theoretical and Practical Approaches. Republished under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0) license

References
Banerjee, S. (2012) Arctic Voices: Resistance at the Tipping Point. New York: Seven Stories Press.
Beier, J.M. (2009) International Relations in Uncommon Places: Indigeneity, Cosmology, and the Limits of International Theory. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Casaús, M. E. (2007) Guatemala: Linaje y racismo. Guatemala: F&G Editores.
Chakrabarty, D. (2008) Provincializing Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Cott, D.L.V. (2008) Radical democracy in the Andes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Deneault, A., Denis, M. and Sacher, W. (2012) Paradis sous terre: comment le Canada est devenu la plaque tournante de l’industrie minie`re mondiale. Montre´al: E´cosocie´te´.
Feather, C. (2014) Violating rights and threatening lives: The Camisea gas project and indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation. Moreton-in-Marsh, United Kingdom: Forest Peoples Programme.
Guartambel, C.P. (2012) Agua u oro: Kimsacocha, la resistencia por el água. Cuenca, Ecuador: Universidad Estatal de Cuenca.
Guevara, F. E. (2013, December 10) “La explotación del Yasuní: reprimarizacioón de la economía del Ecuador.” Opción- Ecuador.
Hobson, J.M. (2012) The Eurocentric Conception of World Politics: Western International Theory 1760-2010. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Jackson, P.T. (2010) The Conduct of Inquiry in International Relations: Philosophy of Science and Its Implications for the Study of World Politics. New York: Routledge.
MacLeod, M. and Pérez, C. (2013) Tu’n Tklet Qnan Tx’otx’, Q’ixkojalel, b’ix Tb’anil Qanq’ib’il, En defensa de la Madre Tierra, sentir lo que siente el otro, y el buen vivir. La lucha de Doña Crisanta contra Goldcorp. México: CeActl.
Madrid, R.L. (2012) The Rise of Ethnic Politics in Latin America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Morgan, R. (2011) Transforming Law and Institution: Indigenous Peoples, the United Nations and Human Rights. Burlington, Vermont: Ashgate.
O’Brien, J.M. (2010) Firsting and Lasting: Writing Indians Out of Existence in New England. Minneapolis, Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press.
Peace Brigades International. (2011) “Mining in Colombia: At What Cost?” Colombia Newsletter, 18: 1–47.
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Self-Determination as Anti-Extractivism
Ryser, R.C. (2012) Indigenous Nations and Modern States: The Political Emergence of Nations Challenging State Power. New York: Routledge.
Sassen, S. (2008) Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Sawyer, S. and Gomez, E.T. (2012) The Politics of Resource Extraction: Indigenous Peoples, Multinational Corporations and the State. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Shadian, J.M. (2013) The Politics of Arctic Sovereignty: Oil, Ice and Inuit Governance. New York: Routledge.
Shaw, K. (2008) Indigeneity and Political Theory: Sovereignty and the limits of the political. New York: Routledge.
Tickner, A.B. (2013) “Core, periphery and (neo)imperialist International Relations.” European Journal of International Relations, 19(3): 627–46.
Tickner, A.B. and Blaney, D.L. (2013) Claiming the International. New York: Routledge.
UN General Assembly. (2008) United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples resolution / adopted by the General Assembly. 2 October 2007, UN. Doc. A/RES/61/295.
Van de Sandt, J. (2009) Mining Conflicts and Indigenous Peoples in Guatemala. The Hague: Cordaid.
Wallerstein, I.M. (2006) European Universalism: The Rhetoric of Power. New York: The New Press.
Zibechi, R. (2013, October 27) “Latin America Rejects the Extractive Model in the Streets.” Americas Program. Available at: http://www.cipamericas.org/archives/10983 (Accessed 29 January 2014).Endnotes
1 A delegation from the Red Sucker Lake First Nation descended on the work camp of Mega Precious Metals, Inc., a mineral exploration company, to stop them from working and demand that they vacate the land immediately. The Mathias Colomb First Nation issued a similar order to Hudbay Mining and Smelting Co., Ltd. and the Province of Manitoba.
2 According to the company’s own social and environmental impact report, the Marlin mine consumes about 250 thousand liters of water every hour (MacLeod and Pérez 2013).

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Promedios México

Video: Homenaje a Galeano

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Radio Zapatista

Nosotrxs ya triunfamos.- el legado de la revolución Zapatista y análisis de las tácticas de contrainsurgencia en Chiapas

Éste 26 de Mayo, en el cierre del seminario “Teoría y práctica del Neozapatismo”, Carlos Aguirre Rojas ofreció una evaluación del encuentro de fuerzas entre el México rebelde y digno, el México Zapatista, y el priismo, ese que regresó con el sueño aburdo y homicida de quedarse otros 70 años en el poder. En la evaluación de Aguirre el zapatismo ya ganó toda vez que “lo adquirido, lo legado a todas las luchas anti-sistémicas del planeta es tan grande que ya triunfamos”. Ese mismo día Martín Álvarez, estudioso de la Insurgencia Zapatista, realizó un recorrido por las estrategias militares, políticas y culturales contrainsugentes ejercidas en Chiapas durante los últimos 20 años.  A continuación las palabras de ambos:

(Descarga aquí)  Aunque perdieramos ya ganamos.  Charla con Carlos Aguirre Rojas en el cierre del seminario “Teoría y práctica del Neozapatismo” . Duración: 10 min.

(Descarga aquí)  Contrainsurgencia en Chiapas ayer y hoy. Conferencia completa de Martín Álvarez en el cierre del seminario “Teoría y práctica del Neozapatismo”. Duración: 53 min.

Evaluación de Carlos Aguirre Rojas:

(Continuar leyendo…)

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CCRI-CG EZLN

Compartición con el CNI

EJÉRCITO ZAPATISTA DE LIBERACIÓN NACIONAL.
MÉXICO.

29 de mayo del 2014.

Al Congreso Nacional Indígena y a los Pueblos Originarios en México.

A la Sexta:

Compañeras y compañeros:

Reciban todas y todos nuestros saludos zapatistas. Les comunicamos aquí cómo queda de la compartición entre los pueblos zapatistas y los pueblos originarios del Congreso Nacional Indígena:

(Continuar leyendo…)