Cahiers des Amériques Latines (Dec 2020)

Un indigénisme sans indiens ? L’Institut indigéniste interaméricain au prisme des organisations internationales

  • Élisabeth Cunin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4000/cal.12198
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 95
pp. 185 – 206

Abstract

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In the 1940s and 1950s, Latin American indigenism played a central role in the thinking of international agencies to elaborate policies for indigenous populations. Luis Rodríguez-Piñero y Todd Shepard have highlighted the influence of Mexico on ILO and UNESCO, particularly around the concept of “integration”. Without questioning such continuity, this article also insists on the discrepancies, reinterpretations, and misunderstandings between the Inter-American Indian Institute, ILO and UNESCO. By appropriating the proposals of the Inter-American Indian Institute, international agencies transform the two central figures of indigenism (the “indigenous” and the “anthropologist”) into globalized actors, relocatable in other contexts (the “underdeveloped” and the “expert”). The question of the relationship between rights and difference, between development and discrimination, at the heart of indigenism, remains unresolved.

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