Indigenous participation and representation in Venezuelan electoral processes

Abstract

This article examines the Venezuelan regional elections of 2008 as a contextual event for the analysis of electoral strategies and results associated with the indigenous representation. Three factors intertwined in the electoral moment are analyzed: 1. the existence of minimum guaranteed representation for indigenous population in legislative organs; 2. the participation of indigenous candidates and electors; 3. the maneuvers of political parties and civil organizations that attempt to channel and/or benefit from such indigenous representation and participation. The description of the electoral context facilitates the identification of factors that, beyond the normative structure of the State, condition the agency of individuals and parties involved in electoral processes. Among those factors are the symbolic value of indigeneity in the current process of national identity re-definition, the interest of political parties in controlling the vote of the indigenous representation and the tendency towards the consolidation of professionalized elites within the indigenous activism.
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Angosto Ferrández, L. F. (2012). Indigenous participation and representation in Venezuelan electoral processes. América Latina Hoy, 60, 153–182. https://doi.org/10.14201/alh.8978

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Author Biography

Luis Fernando Angosto Ferrández

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Sydney University
Departamento de Español y Estudios Latinoamericanos / Departamento de Antropología de la A18 - Brennan MacCallum la Universidad de Sydney. NSW 2006 Australia
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