Mandi A Bane’s scientific contributions

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Publications (2)


Social Change in the Neoliberal Era: The Indigenous Movement in Saquisili, Ecuador.
  • Article

January 2011

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31 Reads

Mandi A Bane

This dissertation explores social change in the post-Cold War period through a two-year ethnographic study of the Ecuadorian indigenous movement. Like many other 1990s social movement organizations, the CONAIE (Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador) pursued social transformation along three pathways: participatory democracy, cultural citizenship, and development with identity. In all three the CONAIE has met with seeming success, and yet the outcomes of its twenty-year history have disappointed many. Drawing on participant observation, including a year of residency in an indigenous community, and formal interviews in Saquisil??, one of the highland cantons where the CONAIE and its political party were strongest, this dissertation argues that the three routes of social transformation have not produced theorized progressive outcomes. On the contrary, they have strengthened the neoliberal capitalist project they were meant to subvert. Participatory democracy established a form of participatory clientelism that served to easily establish links between indigenous communities and neoliberal development agents. Cultural citizenship produced complex situations in which certain expressions of indigenity were not considered ???Other.??? However, those expressions, defined by the dominant ???national??? culture, effectively excluded actually existing indigenous peoples. Development with identity perpetuated under-development by its reliance on romanticized notions of indigenous tradition held by development agents, restricting indigenous aspirations to what they consider culturally appropriate. Moreover, it is argued that the three routes of transformation have been mechanisms of neoliberal governmentality, through which the rationalities of neoliberalism, understood in the Foucaultian sense, as a mode of governance, and practices based on those rationalities have shaped indigenous subjectivities into self-regulating, neoliberal subjects. This dissertation asserts that neoliberal governmentality grants indigenous peoples opportunities to participate in state spaces of empowerment but that change is limited to cultural rights and that which does not threaten the economic order. Although at times they can push beyond the pre-established parameters and challenge neoliberalism, participation in Saquisil?? demobilized the indigenous movement, reinforced neoliberalism, and restricted the scope of social change.


From clients to participants? Alternative local governments and the limitations of participatory democracy in the neoliberal era, SAquisilí, Ecuador

January 2010

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10 Reads

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2 Citations

Research in Political Sociology

This chapter examines the role of actors operating within the context of participatory democratic institutions. The literature on radical democracy suggests that reforming democratic institutions to promote secondary associations, participation, and deliberative decision-making can radically transform states. Through an analysis of alternative local government (ALG) practices in Saquisili, Ecuador, the chapter demonstrates that a variety of actors, with diverse motivations, constitute and operate within participatory institutions. Despite the radical discursive structure of the institutions, however, actors are able to creatively use those institutional spaces for other goals. The implication for radical democratic theory is that not all outcomes that have been read as unintended consequences are unintended.

Citations (1)


... Participatory democracies emphasize the deliberative decisions on the involvement of constituents. This form of democracy provides better decision-making processes by delegating responsibilities of public settlements to local people with greater understanding of the present reality than rulers and gives space for a greater ownership of state-sponsored operations, as they are co-authors in the creation of the public policy (Bane, 2010;Cohen and Fung, 2004;Fung and Wright, 2003). Bula and Espejo (2012) argues for a cybernetic understanding of the organizational structures and governance to let people the chance of represent their desires, reduce power imbalances and influence their destinies. ...

Reference:

Modeling sequential bargains and personalities in democratic deliberation systems: A NSS for social-efficient agreements
From clients to participants? Alternative local governments and the limitations of participatory democracy in the neoliberal era, SAquisilí, Ecuador
  • Citing Article
  • January 2010

Research in Political Sociology