How Western Sovereignty Occludes Indigenous Governance: the Guarani and Kaiowa Peoples in Brazil



Título del documento: How Western Sovereignty Occludes Indigenous Governance: the Guarani and Kaiowa Peoples in Brazil
Revue: Contexto internacional
Base de datos: CLASE
Número de sistema: 000443518
ISSN: 0102-8529
Autores: 1
Instituciones: 1Universidade Federal da Grande Dourados, Dourados, Mato Grosso do Sul. Brasil
Año:
Periodo: Sep-Dic
Volumen: 38
Número: 3
Paginación: 865-886
País: Brasil
Idioma: Inglés
Tipo de documento: Artículo
Enfoque: Analítico, descriptivo
Resumen en inglés Recent international relations (IR) scholarship has developed a growing awareness of this discipline’s colonial roots, prompting a search for decolonising approaches. This article is about indigenous sovereignties and how they have been occluded in the currently globalised European system of states. The method employed is a case study of two of the most impoverished and brutalised Indigenous Peoples in Brazil: the Guarani and the Kaiowa. In an attempt to transit between the world of Westphalia and non-European worlds, it starts by engaging in a conversation with Guarani and Kaiowa knowledge. Then, through a long-term historical analysis, it examines the main colonial processes that caused the occlusion of Guarani and Kaiowa sovereignty. Finally, it provides a broader perspective on how the diffusion of the European model of sovereignty, confronted with Indigenous resistance, has led to the social exclusion of Indigenous Peoples worldwide
Disciplinas: Historia
Palabras clave: Historia regional,
Brasil,
Indígenas,
Guaraní,
Colonialismo,
Exclusión social,
Kaiowas
Texte intégral: Texto completo (Ver HTML)