Ancestral Knowledges and Postcoloniality in Contemporary Ecuador
Epistemic Struggles and Situated Cosmopolitanisms
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Release Date: 04/11/2022
Epistemic Struggles and Situated Cosmopolitanisms. Drawing on rich interview material, this book examines marginalized knowledges as a field of epistemic struggle, examining the uptake of historically subalternized knowledges by the state in Ecuador, and their role in Indigenous organizations' struggles for social change and decolonization, collective rights, and self-determination. In light of an unprecedented constitutional acknowledgement of diverse epistemologies and stipulation making the protection and advancement of so-called 'ancestral knowledges' a duty of the state, this research provides an analysis of the uptake of historically subalternised knowledges by the state during the government of Rafael Correa (2007-2017), as well as of the strive for epistemic justice by peoples and nationalities' organisations in the context of struggles for social change, decolonisation, and self-determination. On the basis of rich empirical material, the analysis traces state discourses and practices and mechanisms to govern 'ancestral knowledges' in the framework of the government's Knowledge Society project and delineates how leaders of peoples and nationalities' organisations struggle for the decolonisation of knowledge. This monograph will be of interest to those concerned with relations between peoples and nationalities and Latin American states, politics of recognition and collective rights, the workings of purportedly post-neoliberal governments and the possibilities and limits for alternatives to development, the struggle of peoples and nationalities' organisations for (epistemic) decolonisation, as well as ongoing (re-)conceptualisations of cosmopolitanisms against restructurations of the coloniality of knowledge and being.