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Citation

Reyes-Garcia, Victoria; Vadez, Vincent; Aragón, Jorge; Huanca, Tomas; & Jagger, Pamela (2010). The Uneven Reach of Decentralization: A Case Study among Indigenous Peoples in the Bolivian Amazon. International Political Science Review, 31(2), 229-243.

Abstract

Decentralization reforms aim at strengthening democracy by promoting political participation among citizens. Research shows (1) that information is a prerequisite for political participation and (2) that people face different private costs in acquiring information. Here we combine the two lines of research and ask: what private costs hamper the acquisition of information on decentralization? For the analysis, we use data from an indigenous population of lowland Bolivia. We surveyed 319 Tsimane’ adults in 12 villages. We found that nine years after the passage of the decentralization laws, knowledge about those reforms had only partially reached the Tsimane’. People who live closer to municipal towns, had more schooling, and participated in the market economy were more aware of decentralization. Political authorities trying to spread the potential benefits of decentralization should address the structural limitations of the dissemination of political knowledge.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0192512110364257

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2010

Journal Title

International Political Science Review

Author(s)

Reyes-Garcia, Victoria
Vadez, Vincent
Aragón, Jorge
Huanca, Tomas
Jagger, Pamela

ORCiD

Jagger - 0000-0001-7148-432X