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[ecrea] CFP Disertaciones "Indigenous Communication in Latin America"
Tue Mar 21 16:43:38 GMT 2017
Articles for Volume 11, Number 2 (Jul-
Dec. 2018), focusing on Indigenous Communication in Latin America
Issue focused on /Indigenous Communication in Latin America/.
Coordinated by Alejandro Barranquero Carretero (Universidad Carlos III
de Madrid, Spain) -(abarranq /at/ hum.uc3m.es)- and Eva Tanco (Centro de
Investigación Internacional para la Participación y el Cambio Social,
Colombia) -(tanco.eva /at/ gmail.com)-.
This issue of/Disertaciones
<https://revistas.urosario.edu.co/index.php/disertaciones/index>/
receives empirical studies (qualitative, quantitative, or mixed) on
different manifestations of indigenous communication in Latin America.
/Disertaciones/ (ISSN: 1856 - 9536) is a peer-reviewed and indexed
academic and scientific publication. It is collaboratively edited by the
Universidad del Rosario
<http://www.urosario.edu.co/Periodismo-y-Opinion-Publica/Inicio/>
(Colombia), the Universidad de los Andes
<http://saber.ula.ve/handle/123456789/26076> (Venezuela) and the
Universidad Complutense de Madrid <http://www.ucm.es/mdcs/> (Spain).
Manuscripts are welcome in *English*, *Spanish* or *Portuguese*.
Over the last two decades, indigenous movements in the region have been
in the vanguard of critical thinking and social action, in open defiance
of the modern/colonial/capitalist tradition and its emphasis on the
instrumentalist rationality and developmentalism that are so destructive
of the natural environment. Many works attest to the viability of
indigenous knowledge and practice regarding social transformation, a
regeneration of social relations and connections between humans and the
natural environment, particularly as we confront the systemic crisis
(political, economic, ecological, and cultural) facing the planet.
Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, indigenous movements drew the
interest of anthropologists and social scientists that saw them from a
colonialist perspective, not valuing the autochthonous cognitive,
aesthetic, and value systems that characterize indigenous people. Since
the 20th century, however, indigenist currents have contributed to a new
appreciation of pre-Columbian cultures that were protected from
destruction in certain territories, although these protected cultures
also tended to be somewhat stereotyped and assimilated to Western
society, reduced in some cases to the realm of folklore. In 1992, the
Fifth Centenary of the so-called Discovery of America saw a significant
movement toward reclaiming indigenous rights around the idea of a common
past (pan-indigenism) and pan-indigenous references such as /Abya Yala/.
More recently, struggles for the recognition of indigenous difference
and identity have given way to demands for empowerment and the
progressive acquisition of social, political, and civil rights. One good
example of this is the promulgation of legal frameworks with
differential approaches promoted by the first clearly indigenous
governments (Ecuador, Bolivia), although such regulations have not
always been coherently translated into policies and practices.
In the area of communication, the first Latin American contributions
came out of anthropology and cultural studies in the 1960s, with
pioneering perspectives such as folk communication and studies of
community/popular/alternative communication media for social change. In
1980, the McBride Report recognized the right to communication and
respect for cultural identity in communication policy. Not until the
1992 commemorations and the 1994 Zapatista uprising in Mexico was there
increased scientific interest in the field that left behind the
exogenous and romanticizing approaches of the past and began to move
toward new objects and perspectives such as digital appropriations by
indigenous communities and the first research on what some call “ethnic
media.”
These contributions had their value, but indigenous protest continued to
find a place in communication studies thanks to the appearance of
indigenous spaces at the hemispheric level such as the Indigenous
Communication Conferences of Abya Yala (Colombia, 2010; México, 2013),
the appearance of the first ethnic universities sponsoring indigenous
communication studies, the vitality of community film and video
organizations, and legislative recognition in some places, such as
Bolivia, of a “fourth sector” of communication based on variable identity.
Indigenous communication is increasingly an object of study today –
albeit not without problems – that provides a place for the perspective
of indigenous communities themselves in countries including Argentina,
Chile, Colombia, México, Ecuador, and Guatemala. This issue of
/Disertaciones/ seeks to incorporate traditional scientific perspectives
on indigenous communication as an object of study, and also incorporate
a space for self-reflection by indigenous leaders, thinkers, and
communities so that expressions of Western academia are accompanied by
incipient indigenous scholarship. We propose a dialogue entailing the
different dimensions of the communications field: empirical approaches
(quantitative and/or qualitative) with theoretical backing and solid
methodology, the systematization of work in the professional field, and
self-reflection and action regarding communication emerging from
indigenous universities themselves. An work agenda and a set of goals
derive from this academic/professional/pedagogical triple perspective,
entailing the following main points:
* Epistemologies and methodologies of indigenous communication and
interrelation with autochthonous imaginaries and cosmovisions
reflecting Right Living (/Buen Vivir/, from kichwa /Sumak Kawsay/
and Aymara /Suma Qamaña/) and other indigenous constructs deriving
from peoples with Maya, Nasa, Quechua, Guaraní, and other influences.
* Communication policy and regulation of ethnic/indigenous media and
the right of indigenous peoples to communication (with their
specific focuses and dimensions), and the role of communities,
organizations, and networks in promoting this right.
* The systematization of media, communications, and journalistic
experiences and practices for indigenous expression, recognition,
and rights: participatory film and video, community radio, online
platforms, artistic and ritual platforms, etc., in connection with
the political, cultural, and social aspects of the indigenous
question, going beyond the mere recounting of these experiences.
* Appropriation of information and communication technology by
indigenous communities: Internet, social networks,
telecommunications, etc., and studies on the digital divide.
* Internal communication processes in Latin American indigenous
movements (decision-making at assemblies and mingas, leadership
development, participatory culture, etc.), from indigenous forms of
building community to communicative practices within organizations
and networks.
* The interrelation between indigenous communication and related
fields of knowledge such as communication for development/social
change, communication/education (edu-communication), social
mediation, environmental communication, citizen and community media,
semiotics and language studies, indigenous communication practices
in other parts of the world, etc.
In this issue, we seek to recognize the indigenous communication
practices that are multiplying in Latin America and to provide a space
for academic discussion of indigenous thinking and indigenous
communication projects and proposals. Thus, we seek the participation of
academics and researchers, but also of indigenous thinkers, leaders and
collectivities that have participated in such proposals and projects on
the ground. The ultimate goal is to establish a scientific panorama of
the past, the present, and the coming challenges for indigenous
communication, together with the contributions of successful practices
in social justice and ecology that contribute to the present moment and
the construction of an alternative proposal for communicative
interactions between human beings and nature.
*Deadline for articles*: 5/15/2017
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