Ethnic entrepreneurs: identity and development politics in Latin America
Publication details: Stanford University Press 2010 StanfordDescription: xiv, 192 pISBN:- 9780804769341
- 305.80098 D3E8
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Ahmedabad | Non-fiction | 305.80098 D3E8 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 171103 |
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305.80097471 S2F8 The future of us all: race and neighborhood politics in New York city | 305.8009747277 B3S4 Show me a hero: a tale of murder, suicide, race, and redemption | 305.80098 D3E8 Ethnic entrepreneurs: identity and development politics in Latin America | 305.8050054 C2M4 Mixed-race and modernity in colonial India: changing concepts of hybridity across empires | 305.80954 R3C8 Cultural diversity and common humanity | 305.8095433 K3R6 A rogue and peasant slave: adivasi resistance, 1800 - 2000 |
Indigenous groups are not often recognized as driving forces in the push for economic development. However, in development efforts across Latin America, governments and corporations have begun to see ethnic cultural differences as an advantage. Ethnic Entrepreneurs explores how diverse groups historically seen as obstacles to development have become valuable to state and regional development initiatives. From the collaboration between a Maya organization and Walmart to a UN-sponsored program that recruits diasporic Latinos, states and corporations are pursuing strategies that complement regional neoliberal shifts. This book examines how ethnic difference is produced through development policy, breaking down the micropolitics of identity and development. It uncovers surprising convergences between ethnic community businesses and corporate social responsibility practices and illuminates how formulations of ethnic difference influence not only changing cultural identifications, but also the political and moral projects that shape Latin America
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