Identity as a weapon for peacebuilding : Strategies and practices of the indigenous guard from Northern Cauca, Columbia

Indigenous people from Nasa group in northern Cauca Province, Colombia, are recognized for their resistance to the violent context. This thesis aims to advance in understanding how indigenous members of the Nasa community developed non-violent strategies to survive in the violent conflicts of Colombian context. For that, the Guardia Indígena, indigenous guard, is studied. An interdisciplinary and interpretative approach was used and data were collected by means of ethnographic methods, living in indigenous territory for over a year. This thesis concludes that the Nasa community have learned to manage the conflict in non-violent ways in their struggles by means of 1) first, collectively framing their history, in ways that their salient identity is as non-violent warriors, and moving towards non-violent practices, which leads to reconstructing their identity from warriors to non-violent warriors; 2) self-organisation and collective action for confronting armed groups when needed; 3) becoming an attractor that motivates people to join them and 4) being and remaining embedded in their own historical analysis, interpretations, and responses to the local context and adapting themselves when needed. Nasa people are active agents of change, they reject the idea of being victims of the system and continuously embrace the idea of agency, in terms of what can they do and then they do it. These strategies represent a framework used by Nasa people to claim their territorial control and contribute to everyday peacebuilding in a way that they resist the domination by Colombian society. Nasa communities are thus producing and transforming systems of governance, that do not respond to national dynamics and by doing this they are inviting us to go beyond normative thinking in peacebuilding, showing us the Nasa’s everyday practices of resistance and thus providing new potentials for conflict transformation in Northern Cauca, Colombia and potentially beyond.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chaves Pérez, Paola
Other Authors: Aarts, N.
Format: Doctoral thesis biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Wageningen University
Subjects:Life Science,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/identity-as-a-weapon-for-peacebuilding-strategies-and-practices-o
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5565182024-06-25 Chaves Pérez, Paola Aarts, N. van Bommel, S. Doctoral thesis Identity as a weapon for peacebuilding : Strategies and practices of the indigenous guard from Northern Cauca, Columbia 2019 Indigenous people from Nasa group in northern Cauca Province, Colombia, are recognized for their resistance to the violent context. This thesis aims to advance in understanding how indigenous members of the Nasa community developed non-violent strategies to survive in the violent conflicts of Colombian context. For that, the Guardia Indígena, indigenous guard, is studied. An interdisciplinary and interpretative approach was used and data were collected by means of ethnographic methods, living in indigenous territory for over a year. This thesis concludes that the Nasa community have learned to manage the conflict in non-violent ways in their struggles by means of 1) first, collectively framing their history, in ways that their salient identity is as non-violent warriors, and moving towards non-violent practices, which leads to reconstructing their identity from warriors to non-violent warriors; 2) self-organisation and collective action for confronting armed groups when needed; 3) becoming an attractor that motivates people to join them and 4) being and remaining embedded in their own historical analysis, interpretations, and responses to the local context and adapting themselves when needed. Nasa people are active agents of change, they reject the idea of being victims of the system and continuously embrace the idea of agency, in terms of what can they do and then they do it. These strategies represent a framework used by Nasa people to claim their territorial control and contribute to everyday peacebuilding in a way that they resist the domination by Colombian society. Nasa communities are thus producing and transforming systems of governance, that do not respond to national dynamics and by doing this they are inviting us to go beyond normative thinking in peacebuilding, showing us the Nasa’s everyday practices of resistance and thus providing new potentials for conflict transformation in Northern Cauca, Colombia and potentially beyond. en Wageningen University application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/identity-as-a-weapon-for-peacebuilding-strategies-and-practices-o 10.18174/504295 https://edepot.wur.nl/504295 Life Science Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Life Science
Life Science
spellingShingle Life Science
Life Science
Chaves Pérez, Paola
Identity as a weapon for peacebuilding : Strategies and practices of the indigenous guard from Northern Cauca, Columbia
description Indigenous people from Nasa group in northern Cauca Province, Colombia, are recognized for their resistance to the violent context. This thesis aims to advance in understanding how indigenous members of the Nasa community developed non-violent strategies to survive in the violent conflicts of Colombian context. For that, the Guardia Indígena, indigenous guard, is studied. An interdisciplinary and interpretative approach was used and data were collected by means of ethnographic methods, living in indigenous territory for over a year. This thesis concludes that the Nasa community have learned to manage the conflict in non-violent ways in their struggles by means of 1) first, collectively framing their history, in ways that their salient identity is as non-violent warriors, and moving towards non-violent practices, which leads to reconstructing their identity from warriors to non-violent warriors; 2) self-organisation and collective action for confronting armed groups when needed; 3) becoming an attractor that motivates people to join them and 4) being and remaining embedded in their own historical analysis, interpretations, and responses to the local context and adapting themselves when needed. Nasa people are active agents of change, they reject the idea of being victims of the system and continuously embrace the idea of agency, in terms of what can they do and then they do it. These strategies represent a framework used by Nasa people to claim their territorial control and contribute to everyday peacebuilding in a way that they resist the domination by Colombian society. Nasa communities are thus producing and transforming systems of governance, that do not respond to national dynamics and by doing this they are inviting us to go beyond normative thinking in peacebuilding, showing us the Nasa’s everyday practices of resistance and thus providing new potentials for conflict transformation in Northern Cauca, Colombia and potentially beyond.
author2 Aarts, N.
author_facet Aarts, N.
Chaves Pérez, Paola
format Doctoral thesis
topic_facet Life Science
author Chaves Pérez, Paola
author_sort Chaves Pérez, Paola
title Identity as a weapon for peacebuilding : Strategies and practices of the indigenous guard from Northern Cauca, Columbia
title_short Identity as a weapon for peacebuilding : Strategies and practices of the indigenous guard from Northern Cauca, Columbia
title_full Identity as a weapon for peacebuilding : Strategies and practices of the indigenous guard from Northern Cauca, Columbia
title_fullStr Identity as a weapon for peacebuilding : Strategies and practices of the indigenous guard from Northern Cauca, Columbia
title_full_unstemmed Identity as a weapon for peacebuilding : Strategies and practices of the indigenous guard from Northern Cauca, Columbia
title_sort identity as a weapon for peacebuilding : strategies and practices of the indigenous guard from northern cauca, columbia
publisher Wageningen University
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/identity-as-a-weapon-for-peacebuilding-strategies-and-practices-o
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