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Los orígenes de la declaración de Barbados y la búsqueda de una antropología comprometida
by
Grunberg, Georg
, Sanabria, Guillermo
in
América Latina
/ Anthropologists
/ Anthropology
/ Barbados Declaration
/ Declaración de Barbados
/ Decolonization
/ derechos de los pueblos indígenas
/ Dictatorship
/ Genocide
/ historia de la antropología
/ history of Anthropology
/ Indigenous peoples
/ indigenous peoples rights
/ Latin America
/ Latin American cultural groups
/ Mobilization
/ Modernization
2025
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Los orígenes de la declaración de Barbados y la búsqueda de una antropología comprometida
by
Grunberg, Georg
, Sanabria, Guillermo
in
América Latina
/ Anthropologists
/ Anthropology
/ Barbados Declaration
/ Declaración de Barbados
/ Decolonization
/ derechos de los pueblos indígenas
/ Dictatorship
/ Genocide
/ historia de la antropología
/ history of Anthropology
/ Indigenous peoples
/ indigenous peoples rights
/ Latin America
/ Latin American cultural groups
/ Mobilization
/ Modernization
2025
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Do you wish to request the book?
Los orígenes de la declaración de Barbados y la búsqueda de una antropología comprometida
by
Grunberg, Georg
, Sanabria, Guillermo
in
América Latina
/ Anthropologists
/ Anthropology
/ Barbados Declaration
/ Declaración de Barbados
/ Decolonization
/ derechos de los pueblos indígenas
/ Dictatorship
/ Genocide
/ historia de la antropología
/ history of Anthropology
/ Indigenous peoples
/ indigenous peoples rights
/ Latin America
/ Latin American cultural groups
/ Mobilization
/ Modernization
2025
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Los orígenes de la declaración de Barbados y la búsqueda de una antropología comprometida
Journal Article
Los orígenes de la declaración de Barbados y la búsqueda de una antropología comprometida
2025
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Overview
En 1971, durante una época de dictaduras y proyectos modernizadores autoritarios en América Latina, un grupo de antropólogos publicó la Declaración de Barbados, en denuncia del genocidio de los pueblos indígenas y para exigir su liberación. Los balances tras 50 años de la declaración destacan el surgimiento de un amplio movimiento que llevó a una mayor articulación política de los indígenas en este contexto. Con base en registros inéditos de la reunión de 1971, este artículo examina algunos antecedentes de ladeclaración, a la luz de las discusiones sobre una antropología comprometida, latinoamericana y del Sur, en boga desde entonces. Planteamos que la originalidad de Barbados anticipó preocupaciones contemporáneas sobre decolonialidad, con un potencial teórico y metodológico aún vigente. In 1971, amid an era of dictatorships and authoritarian modernization projects across Latin America, a group of anthropologists issued the Barbados Declaration, denouncing the genocide of Indigenous peoples and calling for their liberation. Fifty years later, retrospective analyses highlight the emergence of a broad movement that played a key role in the Indigenous political mobilization in the region. Drawing on previously unpublished records from the 1971 meeting, this article examines the key antecedents of the Declaración de Barbados in light of ongoing debates on engaged anthropologies, Latin American anthropologies, and anthropologies of the Global South. We argue that the Barbados Declaration’s originality lies in its early articulation of concerns now central to decolonial thought, offering theoretical and methodological insights that remain relevant today.
Publisher
Universidad Nacional de Colombia
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