2003
DOI: 10.1080/09636410390447617
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“To Halve and to Hold”: Conflicts over Sacred Space and the Problem of Indivisibility

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Cited by 193 publications
(105 citation statements)
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“…Especially the latter aspect also limits the range of acceptable bargains over territory. Indigenous territory might take on features of "indivisibility" (Hassner, 2003)-for both sides, indigenous groups and the state.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Especially the latter aspect also limits the range of acceptable bargains over territory. Indigenous territory might take on features of "indivisibility" (Hassner, 2003)-for both sides, indigenous groups and the state.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From the perspective of indigenous groups, natural resource extraction becomes associated with economic survival and issues of ownership over traditional homelands. Indigenous claims over territory create issues of indivisibility in the sense that mechanisms of territorial distribution become at least sharply limited (Hassner, 2003;Toft, 2002). 7 Although issues of indivisibility also may hold true for ethnic and indigenous groups in non-resource rich regions (Toft, 2002), we argue that resource extraction intensifies the probability of contention, as it implies an additional concrete contestation over territory in the context of new intruding actors (state or multinational companies), which otherwise would not have been present.…”
Section: Natural Resources As Catalyst For Indigenous Mobilizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…the belief that a good cannot be substituted or exchanged for something of comparable value. For a definition of indivisibility that includes nonfungibility (see Hassner, 2003).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These characteristics can lead its inhabitants to explicitly relate to the territory, covering diverse features such as sacred rivers and mountains, the remains of the capital of a historical kingdom dominated by the ancestors of the group, the fundamental dependence on territory due to traditional, land-dependent lifestyles, as well as the loss of autonomy. Sacred places are found to be the only symbolically relevant areas qualifying as indivisible in conflicts (Hassner, 2003), but homeland territory shows similar tendencies toward indivisibility (Toft, 2006). Other scholars argue that there is no such thing as actual indivisibility.…”
Section: How Territory Mattersmentioning
confidence: 99%