bookPart
Ecuador
Fecha
2014Registro en:
Ortiz-T., Pablo. Ecuador. En: Mikkelsen, Cecilie, ed. The Indigenous World 2014. Copenhague: IWGIA, 2014. p. 148-158.
Autor
Ortiz-T., Pablo
Institución
Resumen
Ecuador’s total population numbers some 15,682,792 inhabitants, and
includes 14 nationalities accounting for around 1,100,000 people, all
joined together in a series of local, regional and national organisations.
60.3% of the Andean Kichwa live in six provinces in the Central-North
Mountains; 24.1% live in the Amazon region and belong to ten nationalities;
7.3% live in the Southern Mountains; and the remaining 8.3% live in
the Coastal region and the Galapagos Islands. 78.5% still live in rural areas
and 21.5% in urban areas.
The current Constitution of the Republic recognises the country as a
“…constitutional state of law and social justice, democratic, sovereign,
independent, unitary, intercultural, multinational and secular”. Over the
last five years, the country has undergone a series of political and institutional
reforms. At the same time, however, enforcing and guaranteeing
the collective rights recognised in the Constitution has become a challenge
to the process, and a permanent point of disagreement between
the government, headed by the economist Rafael Correa, and the indigenous
social organisations. The government’s economic action has been
largely marked by an opening up of the extractive industries - oil, copper
and gold - to foreign investment, either of Chinese or Belarussian origin,
or from other Latin American countries such as Brazil, Chile or Argentina.
This has resulted in risk to and impacts on the territorial and cultural integrity
of various indigenous peoples, and an uncertainty created around the
true validity of the broad collective rights enshrined in the Constitution.