Indigenous patrimonialization as an operation of the liberal state

Espinosa P.; Bustamante-Kuschel G.

Keywords: Agamben; indigenous people; liberal state; patrimonialization

Abstract

Indigenous conservation through patrimonialization is the product of political and legal decisions made by a non-indigenous agent: the liberal state, using the law to retain a form of bios. We propose that patrimonialization is the device by which liberal states have processed and integrated indigenous claims into a form of bios ultimately designed to safeguard state legal structures. We argue that, to uphold the rule of law in contexts of struggle and resistance that challenge the very understanding of the law, states respond by wielding the law in the form of the rule by law, that is, pushing the law to the limit to give normative content to the criteria by which the state conducts its affairs, without straying from the individual rights framework. We hold that the rule by law is an operation that defines the patrimonialization of indigenous peoples. It increases their visibility while imposing limits on political action to keep them from becoming sui juris subjects capable of breaching the distinction between zoe and bios. In this article, we try to understand the political–ideological intent of these decisions, the intentions beyond the letter of the law of patrimonialized peoples.

Más información

Título según WOS: Indigenous patrimonialization as an operation of the liberal state
Título según SCOPUS: Indigenous patrimonialization as an operation of the liberal state
Título de la Revista: Philosophy and Social Criticism
Volumen: 48
Número: 6
Editorial: SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Página final: 903
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1177/01914537211033008

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS