Indigenous movements in Latin America exemplify alternatives ways of relating to urban nature. These different practices and ecological imaginaries at play in urban contexts could signal different routes for a more sustainable development. Yet, they remain under-investigated due to a lack of an adequate conceptual repertoire and methodological tools to analyse these practices.
This project addresses this gap by building on Latin America-based scholarship to reframe these types of socioenvironmental struggles as urban contestations, emphasising intersectional dimension of indigeneity, race and gender, to understand these multiple scaled processes. The main questions are: What practices do indigenous urban movements mobilize to defend their right to territory? How do the urban worlds enacted through these practices challenge and inform concepts and methods in urban studies more widely? Empirically, the research builds on a systematic comparative study of Mexico City (Mexico) and La Paz/El Alto (Bolivia) – cities marked with indigenous urban movements and rapid urbanization.
This research will demonstrate novel strategies to compare different ecological and urban understandings. By advancing an interdisciplinary approach to analyse environmental conflicts in cities, the project will contribute to knowledge on urban development and provide a sound base to put forward suitable policy instruments to work towards sustainable cities and communities.
Dr Monika Streule is the principle investigator of the project ‘Decolonizing ecology: Contested urban territories in Mexico City and La Paz/El Alto’. She was awarded a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship, funded by the European Commission.
This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 101024446.
Banner image by Monika Streule, © 2021