Implementation of indigenous public policies and tensions to governance: evidences from the chilean case
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2020Metadata
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Figueroa Huencho, Verónica
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Implementation of indigenous public policies and tensions to governance: evidences from the chilean case
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Abstract
The search for good governance has become a challenge for the
Latin American States in response to the demands of representation
of indigenous peoples that have emerged as political actors in
the last decades. In contexts of Nation-State and Weberian bureaucracies,
the analysis of the indigenous policy implementation process
shows the tension to governance models and the relevance to
incorporate concepts as power, hegemony, or exclusion. From the
Chilean case, this article analyzes the tensions, values, and interests
that arise in governance contexts, based on an analysis model that
shows the difficulties in defining the rules of governance, the
processes of adjustment and cultural mismatch, the political and
economic influence on the implementation process, between
others. The main information arises from in-depth interviews
applied to 44 key actors who have played a role at different stages
in the process of implementation, along with press analysis and
official documents.
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Critical Policy Studies (2020)
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