Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 292
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4422-0754-7 • Paperback • October 2012 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-1-4422-0755-4 • eBook • December 2010 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Marc Becker is professor of Latin American history at Truman State University.
Chapter 1: The Politicization of Indigenous Identities
Chapter 2: Uprisings
Chapter 3: The Emergence of an Electoral Option
Chapter 4: The Last Coup of the Twentieth Century
Chapter 5: Indians in Power
Chapter 6: A Citizens' Revolution
Chapter 7: Rewriting the Constitution . . . Again
Chapter 8: 2009 Elections
Chapter 9: Social Movements and Electoral Politics
Epilogue: The Children of 1990
Bibliography
This is a terrific book! Beyond an excellent account of Ecuador's recent political history, Becker provides us with the history of a paradox: how the strongest Indigenous movement in the Americas found itself in campaigns and alliances that served to limit and undermine its political influence. Ideal for courses on Latin American politics and social movements, this book offers a provocative cautionary tale about the dangers of social movement success.
— José Antonio Lucero, University of Washington
Pachakutik, a Quechua Indian term that signifies rebirth and transformation, depicts the struggle of Ecuador's Indigenous movement for equal rights and justice. Becker (Truman State Univ.) writes as an activist who helped the Indigenous movement establish an Internet base and participated in many of the activities he describes. He discusses the political awakening of Indigenous forces in 1990 and their ensuing massive demonstrations in reaction to deepening poverty aggravated by the government's neoliberal economic policies that privatized public resources and functions. Actions such as the blocking of highways put pressure on Ecuadoran governments to change policies, helped bring about the overthrow of two presidents, and compelled presidents to address issues presented by the Indigenous movement. However, tangible benefits to indigenous communities were quite limited. The pachakutik movement also became engaged in electoral politics, with some success in local, regional, and national elections and the gaining of a few government cabinet positions. However, disunity among Indigenous forces and the influence of powerful national and international economic interests limited indigenous gains, leading to disillusionment and the recent decline in the political influence of the indigenous community. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduate, graduate, and research collections.
— Choice Reviews
Becker's rendering of contemporary Ecuadorian politics, Indigenous organizing, and social movements is superb and reflects an insider's knowledge of this country. Moreover, his treatment of the challenges that organizations face when transitioning from social movements to electoral politics makes this book not only ideal for classroom use but also essential reading for those wishing to gain a greater understanding of the recent grassroots democratization campaigns that have reverberated throughout the world.
— Kenneth Kincaid, Purdue University North Central
Becker gives us a vocabulary and an analytic framework with which to track the efforts of Ecuador’s Indigenous movement to resume the role of protagonist and transform Ecuador into a place where its peoples live not just better but well.
— Latin American Perspectives