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Equal rights, equal respect








Latin American indigenous people are demanding change


For most of the past 500 years, to be an indigenous person in the Americas meant to be eliminated, assimilated or ignored. It is a story that makes for painful reading, but at last, that story is being told. As nations gain a deeper, more accurate understanding of what happened, they are finding ways to redress past wrongs. Indigenous peoples are beginning to receive new respect for claims to their rights, their land, and their identity.

It’s happening across the hemisphere. Earlier this year, Canada’s prime minister signed into existence the new province of Nunavut, a Mexico-sized land of snow and tundra, where political control is firmly in the hands of the Inuit people. In Bolivia, a native Aymara was elected that country’s vice president. In Ecuador, an indigenous woman is vice president of the country’s congress. In the United States, groups representing tribal nations are winning court cases that enforce long-ignored treaty obligations.
Latin American countries have passed constitutional reforms recognizing that their societies are composed of people of different cultures and guaranteeing the rights of native peoples. In some countries indigenous children are studying from textbooks printed in their native languages. Large tracts of tribal land are being demarcated and are receiving legal protection.
Throughout much of the world, the issue of ethnic rights remains an incendiary topic, bringing out the worst in human nature. But in Latin America, many nations are taking courageous and difficult steps toward creating multicultural societies. Instead of fearing ethnic diversity as a source of separatism and national fragmentation, Latin America is acknowledging that different cultural groups can enrich the nation as a whole, just as an orchestra gains power from the unique contributions of each instrument.
In many countries, the Inter-American Development Bank is financing projects that incorporate indigenous institutions and cultural practices. Indigenous groups are carrying out IDB-financed projects or project components. The Bank was also instrumental in establishing the regionwide Indigenous Peoples Fund (see "Indigenous in Charge" on this issue).

Although native peoples are making gains in countries throughout the Americas, Bolivia offers perhaps the best illustration. With its large indigenous population, this Andean nation has adopted a number of innovative laws and reforms that are being closely watched in other countries. Some of these initiatives are explored in the following articles of this special report .



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