Umax Jakañataki – Water is Life

Umax Jakañataki – Water is Life

Amy Eisenberg, Richard Antonio Fernandez Chavez

Volume 17, Number 1 (2018) 17 (1): 10-22


Palabras clave Aymara, water, earth, life, Andes, land, sustainable, sacred, resources, development

Resumen

For Andean people, economic, spiritual and social life, are inextricably tied to land and water. The Aymara of Chile are a small geographically isolated minority who are struggling to maintain their sustainable traditional systems of irrigation water distribution, agriculture, and pastoralism in one of the most arid regions of our world, the Atacama Desert. Together we explore the ethnoecological dimensions of the conflict between externally imposed unsustainable development and the Aymara Marka (Nation) sensitive cultural and natural resource base. The Aymara people are proactively engaged in protecting their sacred resources from further toxic mining, water pollution, diversion and appropriation, international highway development, landfills, hydroelectric and geothermal development, desecration of their natural and cultural properties, and introduction of GMOs into their organic sustainable agricultural and agropastoral systems in the most impoverished province of Chile, highland Parinacota

Autores/as

Amy Eisenberg

Richard Antonio Fernandez Chavez

Publicado junio 1, 2018

Cómo citar

Umax Jakañataki – Water is Life. (2018). Fourth World Journal, 17(1), 10-22. https://doi.org/10.63428/jtdcx950

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Creative Commons License

Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0.

Referencias

Eisenberg, Amy. (2016). Jaqin Uraqpachat Amuyupa. Fourth World Journal, Vol. 15 (1), 73-93. Summer.

Eisenberg, Amy. (2016). Jaqin Uraqpachat Amuyupa - The Aymara Cosmological Vision. Langscape Magazine, Vol. 5, Issue 2, pp. 34-38. Winter 2016.

Eisenberg, Amy. (2013). Aymara Indian Perspectives on Development in the Andes. Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.

https://doi.org/10.2307/jj.30347785

Eisenberg, Amy. (2006). Understanding Aymara Perspectives on Development. Fourth World Journal, Volume 7, Number 1, 84-108.

Eisenberg, Amy. (2003). Aymara Perspectives: Ethnoecological Studies in Andean Communities of Northern Chile. Ph.D. dissertation. Tucson: The University of Arizona.

Mamani, Manuel Mamani. (1996). El Simbolismo, La Reproducción y La Música en El Ritual: Marca y Floreo de Ganado en El Altiplano Chileno. In Cosmología y Música en Los Andes, Max Peter Baumann (Ed.), pp. 221-245. Frankfurt: Biblioteca Iberoamericana.

Mamani, Manuel Mamani. (1994). Antecedentes Míticos y Ecológicos del Significado del Vocablo Chungará. Revista Chungará, 26 (1), 117-124.

Schull, William J., Blago Razmilic, Leonardo Figueroa, and Mariluz Gonzalez. (1990). Trace Metals. In The Aymara: Strategies in Human Adaptation to a Rigorous Environment, William J. Schull, Francisco Rothhammer, and Sara A. Barton (Eds.), pp. 33-44. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publisher.

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