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         Ecuador Indigenous Peoples:     more books (56)
  1. Millennial Ecuador: Critical Essays on Cultural Transformations and Social Dynamics by Norman E.Jr. Whitten, 2003-12-01
  2. Struggles of Voice: The Politics of Indigenous Representation in the Andes (Pitt Latin American Studies) by Jose Antonio Lucero, 2008-10-28
  3. ECUADOR: INDIGENOUS CABINET MEMBERS WALK TIGHTROPE BETWEEN ADMINISTRATION AND COMMUNITIES.: An article from: NotiSur - South American Political and Economic Affairs
  4. THE ECUADORIAN INDIGENOUS PEOPLE'S MOVEMENT: AUTONOMY AND THE ENVIRONMENT: An entry from Gale's <i>History Behind the Headlines, Vols. 1-6</i> by Ximena Sosa-Buchholz, 2001
  5. Growing from the grassroots. (Latin America: Ecuador - Indigenous Movements).: An article from: New Internationalist by Luis Angel Saavedra, 2003-05-01
  6. ECUADOR: PRESIDENT LUCIO GUTIERREZ HAS SHORT HONEYMOON.(indigenous peoples protest new economic policy ): An article from: NotiSur - South American Political and Economic Affairs
  7. Ritual and Remembrance in the Ecuadorian Andes (First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies) by Rachel Corr, 2010-01-01
  8. Holy Intoxication to Drunken Dissipation: Alcohol Among Quichua Speakers in Otavalo, Ecuador by Barbara Y. Butler, 2006-05-01
  9. Indians, Oil, and Politics: A Recent History of Ecuador (Latin American Silhouettes) by Allen Gerlach, 2003-02-01
  10. Fueling destruction in the Amazon. (interview with Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador president Luis Macas) (Interview): An article from: Multinational Monitor
  11. Oily trinkets and beads.(disagreement between Occidental Petroleum and indigenous communities of Ecuador): An article from: Multinational Monitor by Steve Kretzman, Aaron Freeman, 1996-10-01
  12. The "Amazonian trial of the century": indigenous identities, transnational networks, and petroleum in Ecuador.: An article from: Alternatives: Global, Local, Political by Gabriela Valdivia, 2007-01-01
  13. Resistance is Not Futile.(indigenous movements in Mexico, Ecuador)(Brief Article): An article from: Multinational Monitor
  14. Lessons from a Quechua Strongwoman: Ideophony, Dialogue and Perspective (First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies) by Janis B Nuckolls, 2010-09-01

21. MMSD Activites/Indigenous People
Quito, ecuador. The broad aim of the meeting was to facilitate discussion of thecritical issues surrounding the relationships between indigenous peoples and
http://www.iied.org/mmsd/activities/indigenous_people.html
Updated Contacts
Documents
Events Related MMSD Reports

Indigenous Peopl es
(In cooperation with Mining Policy Research Initiative of the International Development Research Centre Ambiente y Sociedad AMEEF , MMSD Australia) Many of the world's richest land in mineral, energy and biodiversity resources have traditionally been occupied by indigenous peoples. In the past there have been incidences of displacement and land disputes associated with mining activities. Though mining projects can bring jobs, roads, schools and health clinics to remote and impoverished areas, these benefits may be perceived as poor recompense for the loss or damage to indigenous cultures. Political liberalisation, allied to a more consensual approach to resolving land use conflicts, is adding a new dimension to this issue. Indigenous peoples have been gaining increasing power over the incidence of projects in their lands and have achieved important recognition in international agreements:
  • Collective right to consultation prior to any project planning in their lands (ILO Convention 169) The inclusion of operational guidelines for loans for projects in indigenous land (World Bank, OD 4.20)

22. Ecuador Indigenous And Afro-Ecuadorian Peoples Development PROJECT
Site Tools. About DevNews Media Center. ESubscriptions. Feedback. ecuador Indigenousand Afro-ecuadorian peoples Development PROJECT. Date January 29, 1998.
http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/NEWS/0,,contentMDK:20027122~menuPK:3447
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Register Site Tools About DevNews Media Center E-Subscriptions Feedback Ecuador Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian Peoples Development PROJECT Date: January 29, 1998
LOAN AMOUNT: IBRD ¢Â€Â” US$25 million
PROJECT DESCRIPTION: This project will use ethnic identity, close attachments to ancestral land, and the capacity to mobilize labor, capital, and other resources to promote employment and growth. It exemplifies a new vision of community development called "ethno-development." Among other activities in the indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian communities, the project will finance investment sub-projects in natural resources management, community-based infrastructure, social infrastructure and micro-enterprises. For more information, please call Mario del Carril at (202) 473-6189, fax at 522-3698, or email

23. Ecuador And Oil
Some of the indigenous peoples of ecuador who live traditionally, inhabit therain forests of the eastern part of the country, the same area where oil
http://www.maanystavat.fi/oileng/ecuador.htm

24. Workshop 2
One of the important tasks in ecuador would be to concentrate on how to make theadvocacy work on indigenous peoples more effective than has been the case so
http://www.maanystavat.fi/oileng/tyoryhma2.htm

25. Ecuador Pipeline Fails To Meet Bank Standards For Indigenous Peoples
ecuador Pipeline Fails to Meet Bank standards for indigenous peoples http//ensnews.com/ens/sep2002/2002-09-13-19.asp anchor1WASHINGTON, DC, September 13
http://www.treff-raum-espaciotime.com/englisch/Articles/ecuadorpipeline.html
Ecuador Pipeline Fails to Meet Bank standards for Indigenous Peoples
http://ens-news.com/ens/sep2002/2002-09-13-19.asp#anchor1 WASHINGTON, DC, September 13, 2002 (ENS) - Environmental groups in Germany and the United States released a new report today showing that the German Bank Westdeutsche Landesbank (WestLB) violated its own policies in loaning US$900 million to the OCP (Oleoducto Crudos Pesasdos—Heavy Crude Pipeline) Consortium building Ecuador’s new heavy crude oil pipeline. The pipeline is being built to transport heavy crude oil from the rainforest to the Pacific coast, doubling oil production in the Ecuadorian Amazon. It will traverse seven national parks and protected areas, including a World Bank Global Environment Facility biodiversity reserve. The independent report written by Dr. Robert Goodland, former chief of the Environmental Department of the World Bank, found, “substantial non-compliance with all four applicable WBG [World Bank Group] Social and Environmental Safeguard Policies.” Goodland is a tropical ecologist who wrote many of the World Bank Social and Environmental Safeguard Policies during his 25 years with the World Bank Group.

26. American Indigenous Peoples
Canadian “first nations”; Mapuche (Chile); Native peoples of Colombia;ecuador indigenous Flags; Qhishwa-Aymara; Inca; Native peoples
http://www.fotw.ca/flags/sam-nat.html
American indigenous peoples
Last modified: by antonio martins
Keywords: america indian native american ethnic group ... indigenous people
Links: FOTW homepage search write us mirrors
See: Other sites:

27. CNN.com - Ecuador, Indigenous Protesters Reach Agreement - February 8, 2001
With annual inflation soaring at 91 percent, only a quarter of ecuador's populationhas fulltime jobs. The indigenous peoples are among the hardest hit by the
http://www.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/americas/02/08/ecuador.agreement/
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Ecuador, indigenous protesters reach agreement
Indians get relief from high fuel costs
In this story: Clashes had left 4 people dead Concessions could cost Noboa Nation's economic woes continuing RELATED STORIES, SITES ... QUITO, Ecuador (CNN) Ecuador lowered the price of cooking fuel and lifted a state of emergency on Thursday after Ecuadorian President Gustavo Noboa reached an agreement with indigenous groups to end 10 days of intense protests. Noboa and Antonio Vargas, president of the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities (CONAIE), Ecuador's largest indigenous movement, signed a 23-point agreement on Wednesday at a Government Palace ceremony. Hundreds of Ecuador's native peoples celebrated in the streets near downtown Quito following the signing ceremony. "I think this is a very important step, especially since we are in a democracy," Vargas said. "Many people are confused and think that the indigenous groups want to disrupt democracy, and we have demonstrated to Ecuador and the world that we want democracy.

28. Web Projects
Latin America. indigenous peoples in ecuador is an extensive collectionof materials I have collected on that country. South and
http://www.yachana.org/marc/internet.html
I've played a key role in developing a variety of important web sites. Also see my related Computer Work Experience . I've also developed a collection of Peace Clip-Art Graphics files. Note : Recently I have been working with a lot of Indigenous organizations helping them to establish a web presence. Most of those sites are linked from my personal Ecuador page . I have also worked on the History and AAUP web pages at Truman State University. This list below is hopelessly out of date. NativeWeb is a collective project which provides resources on Indigenous cultures around the world. It has come to be recognized as the premiere website on native peoples. As part of the NativeWeb project, I have also helped develop the following web sites:

29. Ecuador - Indigenous Flags
The last flag was the flag of the indigenous Parliament Parlamento nacional de lospueblos del ecuador (National Parliament of the ecuador peoples) in black
http://flagspot.net/flags/ec_nativ.html
Ecuador - Indigenous Flags
Last modified: by dov gutterman
Keywords: ecuador qwishwa inca conaie
Links: FOTW homepage search write us mirrors ... Indigenous Flags Seen in TV - Report by Jaume Olle' Indigenous Flags Reported by Written Sources Indigenous Flags in the Web See also:
Overview
Beside of the fact that there are some basic versioins of the whipala, the flag is used toghether with the same flag but which have squares in the rainbow colors instead of stripes (Kollasuyo) the whipala with stripes is called the "tawantinsuyo" flag, or the Inca flag, the inca nation flag, the quechua nation flag. In ecuador they have also some variants. The original flag is the striped whipala, which was the coat of armor of the Inca, long before they started to think of having a own gay flag, rainbow warrior or other rainbow using flags in this world.
Concering the flags which are used in the original Whipala, as the images at this page EMBLEMA NACIONAL del PUSIN-SUYU = TAWANTINSUYU- Huipala/wiphala, where and when did the rainbow flag originate from?
The Indigenous banner is called " huipala" with the seven colors of the rainbow (symbolizing the unity of indigenous peoples before the conquest) and the black flags of Ruminahui  (legendary leader of the autonomous movement) and Atahualpa La bandera indígena se llama : " huipala " con los siete colores del arco iris (que simboliza la unidad de la gente indígena antes de la conquista) y de los banderas negros de Ruminahui  (arranque de cinta legendario del movimiento autónomo) y Atahualpa The Rainbow flag (Wipahla) belong to the Native Andean people of Tahuantinsuyu for more than 500 years. Each color and its place in the flag as the rainbow, have an own indigenous significance.

30. IISD Youth Source Book On Sustainable Development
indigenous confederations from Peru, ecuador, Colombia, Brazil and Bolivia. Theorganization works to defend the rights of indigenous peoples, their self
http://iisd1.iisd.ca/youth/ysbk146.htm

[previous]
[next] [Table of Contents] DIRECTORY
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES ORGANIZATIONS Assembly of First Nations
55 Murray Street, Suite 500
Ottawa, Ontario
Canada K1N 5M3
Tel: +1-613-236-0673
Fax: +1-613-238-5780
Composed of representatives of first nations, their objectives are to share information, develop strategies to address national and regional government policy initiatives as they affect First Nation peoples. CISA
Consejo Indio de Sud America
Indian Council of South America
Apartado Postal 2054 Lima 100 Peru Tel/Fax: +51-14-236-955 CISA was founded in 1980 as an organization for indigenous peoples organizations from South America. CISA's objectives are oriented to reach the recognition and respect for the right to live, justice, development and peace of the indigenous people at the United Nations and National Governments. CISA promotes knowledge and traditional practices on the use, conservation, preservation and sustainable development of natural resources. Confederacion De Nacionalidades Amazonicas Del Peru (CONAP) Brigadier Pumucahua No. 974 Jesus Maria, Lima, Peru

31. Direct Causes Of Deforestation: Oil And Gas Exploitation
Chad oil pipeline response from the World Bank; ecuador Signon letter Prize; NigeriaShell sets forest ablaze; Colombia U'wa indigenous peoples confront oil
http://www.wrm.org.uy/deforestation/oil.html
Oil and Gas exploitation Causes of deforestation: Agriculture and cattle-raising
Dams and megaprojects

Fires

Logging

Mining

Oil and Gas exploitation
Plantations

Indirect causes of deforestation

ARTICLES PUBLISHED IN THE WRM BULLETIN OTHER RELEVANT INFORMATION Life in a Barrel of Oil.
By John Stanton.
by Korinna Horta
/ Environmental Defense - January 2003 Ecologista Italiano deportado en forma violenta por protestar contra OCP (only in Spanish) OilWatch Photo Exhibit. The Oil Flows, the Earth Bleeds. 10 Years of Resistance Our World is not for Transnational Companies - OilWatch Position Statement regarding The 17th World Petroleum Congress Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - September 1 to 5, 2002

32. Quito Declaration
of the indigenous organizations convened in Quito, ecuador RESOLVE 1. That the Conventionand the Parties recognize that indigenous peoples historically have
http://www.wrm.org.uy/actors/CCC/Quito.html
Climate Change Quito Declaration: Recommendations of Indigenous Peoples and Organizations Regarding the Process of the Framework Convention on Climate Change This Declaration will be used by local and indigenous leaders to lobby for increased access and participation in the upcoming Climate negotiations.
The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, as well as the Kyoto Protocol were negotiated without indigenous peoples' participation. Currently, governments are defining a mechanism for implementation of the Climate Change agreements called the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM). The CDM will likely have a tremendous impact on indigenous and local peoples' lives, cultures, lands and territories.
The Quito Declaration below was written and signed in Quito, Ecuador in May, 2000 at a conference to raise indigeneous and local peoples' awareness of the potential threats and opportunities presented by the Clean Development Mechanism. Currently the Amazon Alliance is helping to build support to send a strong indigenous delegation to the Climate Change negotiations in September and November.
THE QUITO DECLARATION:
Considering:
1. That Agenda 21 in chapter 26 recognizes Indigenous Peoples as a Major Group with the right to participate fully in all the national and international processes on sustainable development.

33. The Peoples Of The World Foundation - Ethnic Minorities In
ecuador's indigenous peoples have become very politically involvedin the past 10 years or so. Today they have a more unified, pan
http://www.peoplesoftheworld.org/ecuador.jsp

34. Faces Of Inclusion: Indigenous And Afro-Ecuadorian Peoples Development Project |
Ricardo Ulcuango, president of ECUARUNARI, an indigenous peoples¹organization in ecuador. In January 1998 the World Bank approved
http://www.worldbank.org/faces/ec/
For the first time, indigenous peoples are being given the opportunity to take the process of development into our own hands. This project is the result of our legitimate demands. It is the first time that the government of Ecuador has indebted itself for the direct benefit of our peoples. -Ricardo Ulcuango, president of ECUARUNARI, an indigenous peoples¹ organization in Ecuador
I n January 1998 the World Bank approved a US $50 million loan designed specifically to help people of Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian origin. Cofinanced by the International Fund for Agricultural Development, this initiative focuses on more than 800,000 Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorians belonging to 15 ethnic groups that comprise 30 percent of the population of Ecuador. Living primarily in rural areas, they are among Ecuador¹s poorest people. The Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian Peoples Development Project aims to improve the quality of life in Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian communities by providing more secure land titles and by financing community-based sub-projects. A sub-project could include, for example, a small community-based irrigation system that is identified and managed by people in the community and that complies with minimum technical, social, economic, and environmental eligibility criteria. Working in accordance with existing capacities and cultural values, the initiative is designed to incorporate the rich cultural heritage of the indigenous population in development projects. This highly participatory project operates in a decentralized fashion and has established partnerships with 160 local membership organizations working in 2,300 Indigenous and Afro-Ecuadorian communities.

35. Indigenous Peoples Web Resources
Spring, 2000); ecuador's indigenous peoples (student's final projectfor indigenous peoples course in Spring, 2000); Ethnic Relations
http://www.majbill.vt.edu/polisci/corntassel/add2984.html
Indigenous Peoples Web Resources Indigenous publications Asia Central and South America North America ... Western democracies (other than US/Canada)] Back to IP mainpage General Indigenous Web sites
  • Aboriginal Resources Aboriginal Studies American Indian sites (tribal government homepages etc) Arctic Circle Capucine's Native Resources Center for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research Center for World Indigenous Studies ... Indigenous Peoples Center for Documentation (doCIP) Indigenous Peoples and other cultures under threat Indigenous women's issues Indigenous Women's Network International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA) Legislation affecting American Indians (updated weekly) Mandat International (NGO guide for upcoming conferences) Minorities at Risk Minority Rights Database Minority Rights Group International Native Web ... Sources on migration and ethnic relations (global diasporas) Survival International United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (search for "indigenous peoples" on this website) Uniting Indigenous Peoples of the Western Hemisphere Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization
  • Indigenous Publications back to top exit to mainpage
  • Aboriginal Youth Network (news on indigenous peoples in Canada) American Indian Culture and Research Journal Cultural Survival Quarterly Indian Country Today Native Americas journal ... Native American news (web-based) NativeLaw news digest (updated daily) Native Peoples magazine News from Indian Country Oklahoma Indian Times Red Ink: A Native American Student Publication ... Turtle Tracks (Newsletter for kids from a Native American perspective)
  • 36. RF-US Program - Ecuador
    indigenous peoples in ecuador are divided into 15 indigenous nationalitiesthat speak 11 distinct languages in addition to Spanish.
    http://www.rainforestfoundation.org/1ec.html
    Ecuador
    Indigenous Peoples
    According to the official numbers of the Ecuadorian government, 25% of the Ecuadorian population is Indigenous. However, other sources consider that the percentage is closer to 45% . Indigenous peoples in Ecuador are divided into 15 Indigenous nationalities that speak 11 distinct languages in addition to Spanish.
    Background
    The Ecuadorian economy depends largely on the exploitation of petroleum. In 2000, crude exports represented 41.7% of the total income for the Ecuadorian government. Crude reserves in Ecuador are mostly located in the Amazonian region. The rights to exploit subsoil resources belong to the Ecuadorian State .
    Additional pressure for state and private reforms regarding extraction methods resulted from a class action suit brought by over 30,000 Amazonian Ecuadorians against the oil company Texaco www.texacorainforest.com in New York district court for its destructive activities in the Northern Ecuadorian Amazon.
    Since then, Indigenous peoples have been pressing for the application of the various rights contained in the Constitution, among them the right to be consulted previous to government authorization of programs that will affect Indigenous peoples. The Amazonian Indigenous peoples have struggled to exercise this right principally in regards to the authorization of government plans for the extraction of subsoil resources.
    In November of 2001, in response to a claim presented by the Shuar people, the

    37. I. Wallerstein, 'Indigenous Peoples, Populist Colonels, And
    The cup of discontent overflowed. An organization representing the indigenouspeoples of ecuador (CONAIE) announced a march on the capital.
    http://fbc.binghamton.edu/33-!en.htm

    38. Business & Human Rights: Indigenous Peoples - Lawsuits
    See also other materials on indigenous peoples . examples of lawsuits Texaco (nowChevronTexaco) case in US court regarding the company's conduct in ecuador
    http://www.business-humanrights.org/Indigenous-Lawsuits.htm
    back to home Business and Human Rights: a resource website Indigenous peoples: Lawsuits See also other materials on "Indigenous peoples" examples of lawsuits: BHP mine in Papua New Guinea:

    39. Indigenous Peoples Conference
    PROEIBANDES, Bolivia, ‘Education for indigenous peoples a function and the nationalindigenous women’s the National Congress of ecuador, ‘El movimiento
    http://www.slas.org.uk/indigconf.html
    Gaining Ground: Social, Cultural and Political Processes of Latin America’s Indigenous Peoples
    Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Liverpool
    Dates: 21 – 22 February 2003
    The Conference will examine the means by which Latin American indigenous peoples are gaining ground within the neo-liberal state in the context of globalisation. Papers will examine the processes of struggle, dialogue or, in Sarah Radcliffe’s words, ‘entanglement’, between indigenous peoples and the state, over the definition and control of political, institutional, cultural, social, and environmental terrains. To what extent have indigenous peoples been able to influence the definition of these terrains, i.e. to what extent are they ‘gaining ground’? Or, up to what point has the state been able to subvert their claims and preclude meaningful change?
    Themes of the Conference: ·Intersections between identity, territoriality and legal rights ·Indigenous peoples and constitutional reform ·Indigenous peoples and human rights ·The culturalisation and/or ethnicisation of politics ·Indigenous people and biodiversity ·Indigenous languages, culture and intercultural education programmes

    40. World Conference Against Racism
    La Confederación de Nacionalidades Indígenas del ecuador, ecuador • VictoriaGeingos North America • Jannie Lasimbang, Asia indigenous peoples Pact (AIPP
    http://www.undp.org/wcar/indigenous.html
    The Acrobat Reader is needed from Adobe Systems to view PDF files Roundtable on indigenous peoples and crisis Approaches and strategies for building peace Panelists:
    Conflict whether armed or unarmed, violent or non-violent, is a daily reality of many indigenous peoples' communities. In recent decades conflicts involving indigenous peoples have become more frequent and more brutal. UNDP has been exploring the nexus between issues of vulnerability, inequality, poverty and conflict and examining development patterns, policies and strategies that are likely to worsen inequality and marginalization, and thus precipitate or exacerbate conflict. Case studies are currently under preparation that will document the contributions of civil society and indigenous peoples in conflict prevention and resolution, and provide some instructive practices of indigenous peoples in building peace. The round table will discuss the role of indigenous peoples' organizations and movements in preventing and resolving conflict. Issues will range from the root causes of conflict often linked to racial discrimination, denial of rights including civic, political, cultural, social and economic, control over resources and resource use, and social exclusion; to approaches and strategies indigenous peoples use to negotiate peace. The round table will provide a space for debate on how indigenous peoples and their organizations and multilateral agencies can work with governments to address these issues, while also providing recommendations and strategies to develop partnerships.

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