The production and distribution of maps have not been the exclusive monopoly and competence of Nation-States for several decades. At least since the 1970s, indigenous and afro-descendant populations in the Americas have begun to use participatory mapping as a tool to claim their land rights against Nation-States, accompanying the progress of international law, such as the ILO Convention 169 (1989). In the last twenty years, this research-action tool has begun to assume new ecopolitical values starting from the crucial position of indigenous peoples in the contexts of the current planetary eco-climatic crisis, between vulnerability and sustainable management of their living environments. In this article I will illustrate my research experience in the context of a participatory mapping project of the “ancestral” territory of the Ikoots of San Mateo del Mar, in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec (Oaxaca, Mexico). On the one hand I will reflect on the intertwining of ethnographic experience, participation, intentionality and return of research in a context of growing socio-environmental conflict; on the other hand I will reflect on the radically non-cartesian and non-naturalist ecopolitical positionality that indigenous language-knowledges express in the current global Anthropocene crisis, which goes beyond the notion of geo-political sovereignty at the heart of colonial/ national cartesian cartography and challenges global perception of the crisis and the actions to be pursued to get out of it.

Camminare in campo aperto… Esperienze di mappatura partecipata nel Messico indigeno ed ecopolitica delle lingue-terre native nella crisi eco-climatica globale / Talle, Cristiano. - In: ANTROPOLOGIA PUBBLICA. - ISSN 2531-8799. - 9:2(2023), pp. 1-32. [10.1473/anpub.v9i2.321]

Camminare in campo aperto… Esperienze di mappatura partecipata nel Messico indigeno ed ecopolitica delle lingue-terre native nella crisi eco-climatica globale

Cristiano Talle
2023-01-01

Abstract

The production and distribution of maps have not been the exclusive monopoly and competence of Nation-States for several decades. At least since the 1970s, indigenous and afro-descendant populations in the Americas have begun to use participatory mapping as a tool to claim their land rights against Nation-States, accompanying the progress of international law, such as the ILO Convention 169 (1989). In the last twenty years, this research-action tool has begun to assume new ecopolitical values starting from the crucial position of indigenous peoples in the contexts of the current planetary eco-climatic crisis, between vulnerability and sustainable management of their living environments. In this article I will illustrate my research experience in the context of a participatory mapping project of the “ancestral” territory of the Ikoots of San Mateo del Mar, in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec (Oaxaca, Mexico). On the one hand I will reflect on the intertwining of ethnographic experience, participation, intentionality and return of research in a context of growing socio-environmental conflict; on the other hand I will reflect on the radically non-cartesian and non-naturalist ecopolitical positionality that indigenous language-knowledges express in the current global Anthropocene crisis, which goes beyond the notion of geo-political sovereignty at the heart of colonial/ national cartesian cartography and challenges global perception of the crisis and the actions to be pursued to get out of it.
2023
Camminare in campo aperto… Esperienze di mappatura partecipata nel Messico indigeno ed ecopolitica delle lingue-terre native nella crisi eco-climatica globale / Talle, Cristiano. - In: ANTROPOLOGIA PUBBLICA. - ISSN 2531-8799. - 9:2(2023), pp. 1-32. [10.1473/anpub.v9i2.321]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11388/321229
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