000 03241nam a2200373 4500
001 92544
005 20241105150432.0
007 ta
008 241024b1992 -cn||||| m||| 001 0 eng d
035 _a92544
040 _aCL-TeUF
_bspa
_cCL-TeU
_erda
041 _aInglés
090 0 4 _aTCDI
_bR679i 1992
100 1 _aRochna Ramírez, Susana
245 1 4 _aThe impact of capitalism on easter island :
_ba comparison with other indigenous realities in the americas /
_cSusana Richna Ramirez.
264 _aSaskatchewan :
_bUniversity of Regina ,
_c1992.
300 _avii, 122 hojas.
336 _2rdaconctent
_atext
_btxt
337 _2rdamedia
_aunmediated
_bn
338 _crdacarrier
_avolume
_bnc
349 _aTesis
500 _aIncluye índice.
502 _aTesis : (Master en Estudios Sociales).-- University of Regina, Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research, 1992.
504 _aBibliografía: hojas 115-122.
520 _aThis thesis focuses its analysis on the historical conditions of the people from Easter Island and three other indigenous peoples in the Americas: Mapuche, BriBri and Canadian Indians. The analysis considers their political and Canadian Indians. The analysis considers their political and economic relations with the rest of the world. To this end, the precepts of the “dependency” theory are employed. The thesis documents a historical review of the four cases emphasizing their relation to the colonial expansion of the European powers and their situation under their modern governments. The thesis argues that the European expansion to the New World constituted not only a conquest and colonization process, but the economic expansion of emerging capitalism. This process created the modern capitalist world, divided into economic centers and dependent peripheries. Indian people are part of the periphery, whether or not they are included in First World nation-states. The analysis focuses on the conflicts, which have risen between Indian communal land tenure patterns and capitalist individual property. To this extent, the effects of the imposition of individual allotment on Easter Island is discussed, in comparison with similar experiences in the other three cases. The thesis asserts that the land tenure conflicts are an example of the incompatibility of capitalist and pre-capitalist forms. Furthermore, it is stated that the pre-capitalist formations are being transformed by the capitalist modes into dependent or peripheral modes, losing in this process their original autarkic character. Finally, the thesis concludes by discussing some possible future scenarios for Easter Island, either one in which or another where a consolidation of their communal mode can be achieved through the Rapanui’s political resistance to the individual property.
650 0 4 _aPueblos indígenas
_zAmérica
_xCondiciones económicas
650 0 4 _aColonización
_xPueblos indígenas
_zAmérica
650 0 4 _aMapuches
650 0 4 _aBribri
650 0 4 _aIndios de América del Norte
651 0 _aIsla de Pascua (Chile)
_xCivilización
710 2 _aUniversity of Regina (Canada).
_bFaculty of Graduate Studies and Research
942 _2alphanum
_cTES
999 _c92544
_d92544