Article
Catalan, English, Spanish, Portuguese
ID: <
oai:doaj.org/article:3041aaacbb224b40843eb40ae7081a46>
·
DOI: <
10.5565/rev/athenea.1550>
Abstract
The mobilisation dynamics throughout the Colombian Pacific for decades around the construction of the black community as a collective subject of territorial, economic and cultural rights have emerged in parallel with global phenomena such as the consolidation of this geographical area as an important biodiversity scenario and the adoption of multicultural regimes throughout the hemisphere. In this article, I analyse, on the one hand, how the combination of these factors has had the double connotation of recognising the legal and political subjectivity of the black communities, at the same time as the establishment and gradual escalation of the armed conflict in this area; on the other hand, it argues that the process of reparation carried out by these groups has been an important input as a strategy to resist and fight against the logic of terror imposed in their territories.