2017
DOI: 10.4000/eces.2340
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Os desafios das políticas neoliberais e o movimento de resistência dos povos indígenas em Odisha, na Índia

Abstract: Os desafios das políticas neoliberais e o movimento de resistência dos povos indígenas em Odisha, na Índia

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…For instance, Aiyadurai (2018) demonstrates that the Mishmi community's spiritual kinship with tigers is challenged by conservationists' agenda of creating a tiger reserve to separate humans from tigers. Pandey (2017) examines how Dongria Kondh's legal battle against a mining corporation in Odisha remains a landmark case in the recognition of tribal communities' spiritual and material identities tied to their land. In this way, it represents the ongoing resistance of local and tribal groups to State prioritising corporate interests.…”
Section: Feminist Intersectional Perspectives On Micro-politics and C...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, Aiyadurai (2018) demonstrates that the Mishmi community's spiritual kinship with tigers is challenged by conservationists' agenda of creating a tiger reserve to separate humans from tigers. Pandey (2017) examines how Dongria Kondh's legal battle against a mining corporation in Odisha remains a landmark case in the recognition of tribal communities' spiritual and material identities tied to their land. In this way, it represents the ongoing resistance of local and tribal groups to State prioritising corporate interests.…”
Section: Feminist Intersectional Perspectives On Micro-politics and C...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Government economic policies in the extractive sectors of Brazil, Chile, and India can be described as a form of neoliberal developmentalism where the state plays a key role in encouraging foreign investment by opening up markets while also creating institutional arrangements that determine how economic and social relations are governed (Adduci, 2012; Nem Singh, 2012; Pandey, 2017). The political economy of resource extraction is constituted by the capital-state-development nexus which reflects both the neoliberal political rationality of governments and the governmentality of the developmental state.…”
Section: The Political Economy Of Resource Extractionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this paper, the idea of the subaltern is extended to indigenous women who face multiple forms of oppression, contending that their marginalization with the marginalized group of 'third-world women' (Spivak, 1994, p. 94) is overlooked. Indigenous women in India are becoming subaltern because of their subordinate position, which is caused by the dominance of non-indigenous knowledge systems, the misrepresentation of indigenous culture, and neoliberal government policies (Bandyopadhyay & Yuwanond, 2018;Guha, 1997;Pandey, 2017). As a result, the peripheral position of indigenous women within the categories of 'third world women' leads to further dominance and effacement (Narayan, 2013).…”
Section: Integrating Subaltern Theory and Self-determination Approach For Indigenous Women's Vetmentioning
confidence: 99%