Contextualizing consent: spaces for repression, resistance, and accommodation in Bolivia’s TIPNIS consultation

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  • Lisbet Christoffersen

The expansion of extractive activities and the development of associated infrastructures are reviving land disputes in the Bolivian lowlands. Consultation based on Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC), which has been a longstanding demand of indigenous peoples, is now being employed in cases of interventions on their lands. This paper chronicles a contested consultation in the Indigenous Territory and National Park Isiboro-Sécure (TIPNIS). The case study displays a built-in paradox in FPIC, which is based on presuppositions of equality but fails to consider the very structural imbalances that it is meant to resolve. It casts light on the implications of the consultation for those involved and depicts fundamentally different visions of the Plurinational State: the wish for a strengthening of national level institutions, on the one hand, and for self-governed collective entities, on the other. The article thus enters the debate of the ambiguous attempts of various Latin American countries to establish post-liberal democratic systems. I argue that the implementation of FPIC as direct democracy only reproduces inequalities. A closed space, after a thorough deliberative process, can provide more equity in decision-making, which is what lowland indigenous representatives also suggest.

Original languageEnglish
JournalLatin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies
Volume15
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)105-129
Number of pages25
ISSN1744-2222
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

    Research areas

  • Deliberation, Free Prior Informed Consent, participation, plurinationalism, resource nationalism

ID: 243062501