Affiliation:
1. National Council of Scientific and Technological Research (CONICET) Buenos Aires Argentina
2. Escuela IDAES (National University of San Martín)
Abstract
AbstractThis article examines in depth the nuances of the Toba (Qom) people's territorial claims over the Argentinean Chaco. Ethnographic fieldwork carried out from 1997 to the present in Qom communities in the center of the Argentinean Chaco allows me to analyze the relationships that these communities have maintained and continue maintaining with their territory since their insertion into the regional economy after the Chaco's colonization. The analysis of the alternation of destructive and protective practices shows us the Qom cosmological understandings of human‐forest relations and the ambiguities of their coexistence in which Indigenous people, the nation‐state, nongovernmental organizations (NGO), settlers, and nonhuman beings participate. I propose that the forest, rather than being seen by the Qom people as a common good to be protected amid a planetary crisis, is a relation within relations intersected by ambiguity. This article aims to contribute to studies on the particularities of Indigenous people standing against the destruction that the Anthropocene has brought, avoiding unitary ideas about the Anthropocene.
Funder
Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas
Reference78 articles.
1. Cuidando la Patagonia Azul: Prácticas y estrategias de los pueblos originarios para curar las zonas marinas del sur de Chile;Araoz Francisco;The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology,2023
2. Principles of Tsawalk
3. La ontología política de un programa de caza sustentable;Blaser Mario;Red Antropologías del Mundo,2009