Closer to legality. CONADI, indigenous law and the Mapuche people (1989-2004)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.32735/S0718-6568/2004-N8-308Keywords:
indian law, Mapuche people, indigenous policy, chilean nation, CONADIAbstract
Noting that the current Indian political divide Chilean society opposing positions, the article presents a look of overcoming those who see it as a threat to institutional order and unity of the Chilean nation, and who consider the mere cosmetic changes ethnocidal model of the Chilean State. It is noted that the commitments of the Pact of New Imperial partial levels of compliance are left to Chile under such matters in the Latin American context, which has led to the relationship between the government and the indigenous movement CONADI straddles contradictions and intractable conflicts.
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Published
2018-07-01
How to Cite
Vergara, J. I., Foerster, R., & Gundermann, H. (2018). Closer to legality. CONADI, indigenous law and the Mapuche people (1989-2004). Polis (Santiago), (8). https://doi.org/10.32735/S0718-6568/2004-N8-308
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Propuestas y avances de investigación