info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Making the Indigenous Desert from the European Oasis: The Ethnopolitics of Water in Mendoza, Argentina
Fecha
2017-04Registro en:
Escolar, Diego; Saldi, Leticia; Making the Indigenous Desert from the European Oasis: The Ethnopolitics of Water in Mendoza, Argentina; Cambridge University Press; Journal of Latin American Studies; 49; 2; 4-2017; 269-297
0022-216X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Escolar, Diego
Saldi, Leticia
Resumen
This article analyses the ethno-politics of water in Argentina at the high point of European immigration, the first three decades of the twentieth century. Focusing on the drying of the Guanacache wetlands, located in the wine-producing region of Cuyo, we show how national and provincial ideologies based on ‘whitening’ and ‘civilisation’ shaped policies that favoured European immigrants at the expense of autochthonous populations in the geographic and social struggle for irrigation water. A large-scale redistribution of water resources drove the indigenisation of indigenous and criollo populations and the desertification of their land.