Isolation, integration, and ethnic boundaries in rural Guatemala

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2005

item.page.contributor-advisor

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

The Sociological Quarterly, vol. 46(2)

item.page.description-pages

213-236

Abstract

We investigate two perspectives about the effects of reduced discrimination and greater social and economic opportunities on ethnic identity in rural areas of contemporary Guatemala. Our analysis contrasts the effects of new opportunities in Indigenous communities on language use and dress, using data from the 1995 Encuesta Guatemalteca de Salud Familiar (EGSF). While the use of both dress and language has changed substantially in recent years, language use has changed considerably more than dress. We conclude that, in this context, economic opportunities have not necessarily diminished ethnic solidarity, but may have instead reshaped it.

Description

Keywords

GRUPOS ETNICOS, ZONAS RURARLES, POBLACION INDIGENA, GUATEMALA

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

SIBDI, UCR - San José, Costa Rica.

© Todos los derechos reservados, 2024