Internal Seminar: Centre Lunch

Topics of a general interest for all employees about administrative and management issues, and short presentation of a new publication, this time: Ekern's latest publication: Between relations and rights: writing constitutions in Mayan Guatemala. This seminar will also be an end-of-term ceremony for all employees before the summer.

ABSTRACT

This article discusses indigenous autonomy and legal pluralism in Guatemala. It explores how local governing practices are increasingly being based on written, constitution-like statutes with an emergent focus on “rights”, replacing oral traditions focussed on relations. It argues that notwithstanding this great change, communal authorities continue to function as a principal medium for articulating indigenous sovereignty by appropriating a vital piece of modern nation-state imagery: constitutional law. This transformation of local political practices also shows how a long tradition with legal pluralism in Guatemala is maintained thanks to the continuing ordering capacity of the communal authorities. Building a successful, multicultural Guatemala hinges as much on the ability of communal power to reinvent itself as on nation-state legal reform.

Text from: Taylor & Francis Online

 

Publisert 7. juni 2018 10:07 - Sist endret 25. juni 2018 11:10