Discriminación étnica y “racial” en el barrio Cashapamba 1, cantón Pujilí.

This qualitative-analytical Research Report aims to investigate how the different forms of "racial" and ethnic discrimination operate on the indigenous population of the Cashapamba 1 neighborhood, located in the Pujilí canton, taking into account that racist discourses and stereotypes They...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor: Espinel Monge, José Miguel
Tipo de recurso: tesis de maestría
Estado:Versión publicada
Fecha de publicación:2023
País:Ecuador
Institución:Universidad Técnica de Cotopaxi
Repositorio:Repositorio Universidad Técnica de Cotopaxi
Idioma:español
OAI Identifier:oai:oai:repositorio.utc.edu.ec:27000:27000/10800
Acceso en línea:http://repositorio.utc.edu.ec/handle/27000/10800
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:COLONIALIDAD DEL PODER
IDENTIDAD
DISCRIMINACIÓN ÉTNICA Y “RACIAL
INDÍGENA
DESARROLLO LOCAL
Descripción
Sumario:This qualitative-analytical Research Report aims to investigate how the different forms of "racial" and ethnic discrimination operate on the indigenous population of the Cashapamba 1 neighborhood, located in the Pujilí canton, taking into account that racist discourses and stereotypes They continue to be abundant in the daily life of Pujilense mestizos, thanks to a social heritage of coloniality. The objectives are to analyze racist words, speeches, and practices to generate a proposal with an antidiscriminatory approach. The methodology is focus groups, collecting the version of the discriminated population firsthand; a systematic review of the scientific literatura was made. According to the data collected, a proposal was built that can serve future projects interested in the mitigation of racism, whose purpose is the elaboration of an illustrated glossary of deconstructed words, the same that can be used by the inhabitants of the neighborhood and others. Indigenous peoples to challenge discrimination, or strengthen the resilience they have learned to show in the face of this phenomenon. The approach of the research was the theory of the Coloniality of Power, together with the concepts of identity (the 'Indian', the indigenous, and the mestizo), “race”, racism, and ethnic and “racial” discrimination. It was possible to show that the neighborhood inhabitants are people who are continually transfiguring their identity, adopting elements of Western culture and conserving their own elements; despite this, highly offensive terms such as 'Indian' continue to be tools used by mestizos to attack indigenous people in certain spaces and situations.