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Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill
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Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Dec 15, 2015

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Page 1: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President

Alex “Sasha” Basta

Sarah Espinoza

Sarah Livingston

Austin Rodill

Page 2: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Evo MoralesBorn October 26, 1959 in Isallavi,

Bolivia

Began working at age 7 herding Llamas

Joined the Bolivian military

Moved to Chapare where his family farmed crops of coca

Page 3: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Evo Morales: Life• 80’s he became active in

regional coca- growers union, and in 1985 was elected the groups general secretary.

• In the mid 90’s Bolivia was suppressing coca production with US. He founded a national political party- the leftist Movement Toward Socialism.

• Won a seat in the House of Deputies in 1997

Page 4: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Evo Morales: Political Life• In 2005 MAS presidential election

he won 54% of votes and became the first Indian president.

• Sworn in in 2006 he pledged to reduce poverty among the countries indian population, and increase taxes on the wealthy.

• A recall referendum on Morales’s leadership was held in Aug. 2008 and two thirds of the voters supported the continuance of his presidency.

Page 5: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Bolivian Political System

Type of Government: Republic of Bolivia, now “Plurational State of Bolivia”

3-prang power: executive, legislative, judicial

President is both Chief of State and the Head of Government, cabinet appointed by president

Legal System

Page 6: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Indigenous Peoples & Demographics

A multi-ethnic society

Amerindian groups: Aymaras, Quechuas, Chiquitanos, Guarani, and Los Mojenos

Make up 55% of the population

2/3 of people live in poverty

Page 7: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Indigenous Rights

Multiple factors have been encroaching on indigenous land. (oil, farming, drug trafficking, urbanization)

A new constitutional framework. One of the most “forward thinking” in Latin America Utilizes international human rights standards

But is he dividing the nation more?

Many people say this is a victory for the marginalized indigenous groups!

Page 8: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Importance of National Executive in Bolivia

President Juan Evo Morales Ayma.

The president is elected in a five year term by the popular vote.

The Bolivian president is the head of state, head of government (executive power is exercised by the government)

Page 9: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

How Morales is Different from other Executives

Revising a new "constitution" was favored by Bolivians but also put fear on his administration

"The document also contains two other articles that are likely to devastate the democracy. One creates a special class of people deemed to have pure Indian blood, granting them special privileges including designated seats in the legislature."(Wall Street Journal)

Page 10: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Countries that followed suit

Guatemala

Ecuador

Mexico

Bolivia, Guatemala, Peru, Ecuador, and Mexico are home to 90% of Latin America’s 35-40 million indigenous

Page 11: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Guatemala

Mayan organizations have challenged the class-based discourse

Organizations have been created to be more responsive to the indigenous communities and concerns

Accord on Identity and Rights of Indigenous Peoples (1995)

Final Peace Accord (1996)

Page 12: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Ecuador

Ecuadorian indigenous movement has shaped state policy on bicultural education, territorial autonomy, and agrarian reform

ECUARUNARI in the Andes region

One of four major regional groupings of CONAIE

Ecuador on forefront of struggle between multinational corporations and indigenous groups

Page 13: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Mexico

Zapatista rebellion in Chiapas- January 1, 1994

Indigenous autonomy and cultural respect alongside democracy

Accords on Indigenous Rights and Culture (1996)

Struggling with implementation

Indigenous groups trying to create stronger link between themselves and partisan politics

Page 14: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Future Implications

Boliva capable of maintaining economic reform process in poverty-sensitive manner

Massive educational reform needed to lessen educational gap between elite and poor

Need for partisan think tanks and generally, more competition among parties

Sustainable poverty reduction will require constructive involvement of political parties

Page 15: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

Questions

Is this a stable precedent that has been set in Latin America?

Do you think this is solely a move for more executive power?

Can you foresee the the newly-deepened ethnic divisions being a problem in the future?

Page 16: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

References Castillo, R. (March 2006). The indigenous movement in Mexico:

Between electoral politics and local resistance. Latin American Perspectives, 33, 115-120. doi: 10.117/00945882X05286093.

Ruge, D. (2009). Indigenous rights in Latin America: The gap between doctrine and reality. Human Rights & Human Welfare, 9, 72-

74. Retrieved from: http://www.du.edu/korbel/hrhw/researchdigest/latinamerica2/digest-human%20rights%20in%20latin

%20america %20vol%202-indigenousrights.pdf.

Yashar, D. (October 1998). Contesting citizenship: Indigenous movements and democracy in Latin America. Comparative Politics, 31, 23-26. Retrieved from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/422104?seq=1.

(2013, August 7). Ecuarunari inició consultas para definir diálogo con el gobierno. El Telégrafo. Retrieved from: http://

www.telegrafo.com.ec/actualidad/item/ecuarunari-inicio-consultas-para-definir-dialogo-con-el-gobierno.html.

Page 17: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

References Cont.

Mandaville, A. (October 2004). Bolivia’s political party system and the incentives for pro-party reform. National Democratic Institute for International Affairs, 30-39. Retrieved from: http:// www.ndi.org/files/1852_bo_propoor_100104_full_0.pdf.

Llana-Miller, S. (January 2009). Bolivia sets new global high mark for indigenous rights. The Christian

Science Monitor http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Americas/2009/0127/p01s01-

woam.html/(page)/2

Page 18: Evo Morales South America’s First Indigenous President Alex “Sasha” Basta Sarah Espinoza Sarah Livingston Austin Rodill.

References Cont.

Bolivia Facts: Bolivia Government. Bolivia Bella. 2011

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Americas/2009/0127/p01s01-woam.html/(page)/2

Fromherz, N. (October 2010). The Rise and Fall of Bolivia’s Evo Morales. How South America’s

First Indigenous President Lost his Way. Council

on Foreign Relations.

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Americas/2009/0127/p01s01-

woam.html/(page)/2