Table of Content
1. Introduction. 3
2. Socio-cultural background of indigenous people 3
3. Socioeconomic profile 4
3.1. Poverty levels 4
3.2. Labour market participation. 5
4. Government policies towards indigenous people 8
5. Levels of social organization 9
5.1. The development of indigenous people’s social organizations 9
5.2. Social Networks 10
6. Conclusion 10
2
1. Introduction
The indigenous people in Ecuador can be distinguished from many other Latin American countries for the way their movement has shaped national debate and policymaking. Indigenous groups, also called Amerindians, have shown a great capacity to mobilize and negotiate with the national government as well as to achieve their goals democratically. In general, indigenous peoples in Ecuador suffer from economic deprivation, but are well endowed in social capital. Indigenous people’s organizations range from grassroots, regional, to national levels. Despite this increased political influence, the indigenous population continues to suffer from poverty and exclusion - and remain the poorest groups in a multicultural Ecuadorian society. In addition to being among the poorest groups in Ecuador, indigenous households also have lower human capital endowments (health and education). Indigenous individuals have lower education and schooling attendance and worse nutritional conditions than non-indigenous individuals within the same consumption quintiles. The probability of being poor is higher for indigenous individuals and households, even after controlling for education, health and other factors.
In the first part socio-cultural background of indigenous people is reviewed. The ethnically diverse Ecuadorian society is analyzed as well as the representation of indigenous people in it. In the second part of the paper the socio-economic profile of indigenous people is analyzed in terms of the degree of poverty and labor market participation. The indigenous people labour market participation is viewed in terms of occupation and sectors; and determinants of employment. In the following part government policies and programmes are seen at more historical view through the development and integration of indigenous people in the Ecuadorian society. In the last part the levels of social organization are analyzed with the inclusion of social networks, which plays an important role for the indigenous people’s employment.
2. Socio-cultural background of indigenous people
Demographically, Ecuador's population is ethnically diverse. The largest ethnic group is comprised of Mestizos, the mixed descendants of Spanish colonists and indigenous Native Americans, who constitute 65% of the population. Amerindians are second in numbers and account for 25% of the current population. Whites, mainly criollos, the unmixed descendants of early Spanish colonists, as well as immigrants from other European and Latin American countries, and account for some 7%.
3
There is a small Afro-Ecuadorian minority, including Mulattos and zambos, which accounts for 3% of the Ecuadorian population.
Indigenous peoples are important parts of Ecuador’s multicultural society. They differ from the mainstream Hispanic (white and mixed or mestizo) population both in their degree of economic deprivation, their high level of social capital, and their cultural and social characteristics. There are 13 officially designated, non-Hispanic ethnic groups or nationalities in Ecuador. The largest nationality comprises the highland Quichua-speakers (also known as the Runa) who constitute more than 90 percent of Ecuador’s indigenous peoples. Many indigenous people have moved to urban areas and in some cases have become assimilated into the dominant mestizo society. However, in rural areas they have tended to maintain their distinct identity. Ecuador’s rural population of indigenous peoples is concentrated in 288 of the country’s 966 parroquias (parishes, the smallest division in the country). This segment of the Ecuadoran population represents more than 1.5 million people.
3. Socioeconomic profile
3.1. Poverty levels
Gross Domestic Product per Capita in Ecuador is estimated at 3,050 for 2006. There is an average growth rate from 1996 to 2006, which amounts to above 4 percent. Due to some socio demographic factors and their low endowment in human capital, indigenous people’s income generation is under the average income generated in Ecuador. 1
Indigenous individuals have lower education and schooling attendance and worse nutritional conditions than non-indigenous individuals within the same consumption quintiles and therefore the probability of being poor for indigenous households is higher than for non indigenous. The factors, which have influence on poverty, can be viewed at rural and urban. Urban poverty in Ecuador is associated with low educational achievement, employment in the informal sector, and low rates of participation in the labor force by women, while rural poverty is associated with lack of education, little access to land, and a low degree of market integration.
1 http://www.law.nyu.edu/kingsburyb/spring04/indigenousPeoples/classmaterials/class12/D%20-
%20Roger%20Plant.rtf
4
Arbeit zitieren:
Veronika Minkova, 2007, Ecuador: Model of successful integration of indigenous people, München, GRIN Verlag GmbH
Dieser Text kann über folgende URL aufgerufen und zitiert werden:
Einbetten
DOI
Emile Zola: Der Experimentalroman
Romanistik - Französisch - Literatur
Referat (Ausarbeitung), 13 Seiten
Zentrale Themen in Emile Zolas 'Germinal'
Romanistik - Französisch - Literatur
Seminararbeit, 21 Seiten
Das Konzept des klassischen Psychodramas im Kontext von Einzelarbeit i...
Sozialpädagogik / Sozialarbeit
Hausarbeit, 22 Seiten
Visuelle Wahrnehmung und Virtuelle Welten
Psychologie - Medienpsychologie
Wissenschaftlicher Aufsatz, 25 Seiten
Analyse der Funktion ausgewählter Antikenmotive in Charles Baudelaires...
Romanistik - Französisch - Literatur
Seminararbeit, 24 Seiten
Der französische Naturalismus - ein kurzer Überblick
Romanistik - Französisch - Literatur
Seminararbeit, 11 Seiten
Baudelaires "Hymne à la beauté" (Les Fleurs du mal)
Romanistik - Französisch - Literatur
Hausarbeit, 7 Seiten
Eine kurze Darstellung des Naturalismus nach Zola
Romanistik - Französisch - Literatur
Hausarbeit, 11 Seiten
Interpretation von "La vida es sueno" von Calderón de la Bar...
Romanistik - Spanische Sprache, Literatur, Landeskunde
Seminararbeit, 18 Seiten
Postkolonialismus und Globalisierung
Politik - Politische Theorie und Ideengeschichte
Hausarbeit (Hauptseminar), 20 Seiten
Kinderarbeit in der zweiten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts
Geschichte Europa - Deutschland - 1848, Kaiserreich, Imperialismus
Hausarbeit, 16 Seiten
Analyse der Intrigenstruktur in Calderóns "La dama duende". ...
Romanistik - Spanische Sprache, Literatur, Landeskunde
Seminararbeit, 16 Seiten
Die comedia als populäre Theatergattung des spanischen Siglo de Oro
Lope de Vegas "Fuente Ove...
Romanistik - Spanische Sprache, Literatur, Landeskunde
Hausarbeit, 17 Seiten
Ehe und Familie in Emile Zolas Les Rougon-Macquart
Geschichte Europa - and. Länder - Neuzeit, Absolutismus, Industrialisierung
Hausarbeit (Hauptseminar), 57 Seiten
Charles Baudelaire: Sein Leben, sein Werk und die "Blumen des Bös...
Germanistik - Neuere Deutsche Literatur
Seminararbeit, 19 Seiten
Veronika Minkova's Text Ecuador: Model of successful integration of indigenous people ist nun auf dem Buchmarkt erhältlich
Veronika Minkova hat den Text Ecuador: Model of successful integration of indigenous people veröffentlicht
Veronika Minkova hat einen neuen Text hochgeladen
0 Kommentare