1st Edition
Narratives and Imaginings of Citizenship in Latin America
1. Introduction: Narratives and imaginaries of citizenship in Latin America Judy Meltzer and Cristina Rojas 2. Legal narratives of citizenship, the social question, and public order in Colombia, 1915 – 1930 and after Catherine C. LeGrand 3. Nationalism and immigrant labor in a tropical enclave: the West Indians of Colón City, 1850 –1936 Marixa Lasso 4. Locating nature’s citizens: Latin American ecologies of political space Alex Latta 5. Acts of indigenship: historical struggles for equality and colonial difference in Bolivia Cristina Rojas 6. Decolonizing citizenship: reflections on the coloniality of power in Argentina Lucy Taylor 7. Managing the citizen: privatized public works and the bureaucratic management of citizenship in post-authoritarian Chile, 1990 – 2005 Enrique R. Silva 8. Narratives of citizenship in Medellín, Colombia Daniel Tubb 9. ‘Good citizenship’ and the promotion of personal savings accounts in Peru Judy Meltzer
Biography
Cristina Rojas is professor of Political Science at Carleton University. Her research focuses on decolonizing global governance and emancipatory practices of citizenship. Her recent articles are published in Citizenship Studies, Globalizations, and Bulletin of Latin American Research. She is the author of Civilization and Violence: Regimes of Representation in 19th C. Colombia (2002).
Judy Meltzer holds a doctorate in Political Science from Carleton University. Her research focuses on citizenship and development. Recent publications appear in the Routledge Handbook of Global Citizenship (2014 forthcoming), Environment & Citizenship in Latin America (2012). She is co-editor of a Special Issue of Citizenship Studies (2013).






