Virtual Special Issue: Peru
This virtual special issue,
published to coincide with the conference of the Latin American Studies
Association to be held in Lima on 29 April-1 May 2017, brings together
articles published in the Journal of Latin American Studies on
Peru in the last decade. The articles selected provide a limited though
revealing vista onto recent social science scholarship on Peru.
In terms of disciplines, there is a strong political science contingent. In an influential article, de la Madrid examines ‘ethnic voting’ to
show how, despite the absence of indigenous parties in Peru, voting
behaviour has been shaped by presidential candidates’ use of
ethnicity-based appeals to the electorate. In an article that reflects
ongoing preoccupations with the quality of Peru’s democratic
institutions, Dargent considers judicial independence through an examination of Peru’s Constitutional Tribunal. Reflecting a similar concern with the health of democratic institutions, Pegram accounts for the qualified success of Peru’s human right’s ombudsman.
Two articles focus on women’s movements in Peru, though one adopts a transnational comparative perspective. Jenkins
considers the factors that have shaped the apparent depoliticisation of
women’s grassroots movements and challenges the idea that neoliberalism
alone can account for the process. Rousseau
and Morales Hudon’s article examines indigenous women’s movements in
Mexico, Bolivia and Peru and assess the conditions that lead, in each
case, to the development of autonomous indigenous women’s mobilisation. The
Peruvian case offers a dual situation with some women gaining autonomy
within mixed-gender indigenous organisations and others forming
independent organisations that act autonomously from mixed-gender
organisations.
Killick
examines the ways in which specific cultural forms are used to manage
economic relations between Ashéninka and mestizos in the Ucayali
region. Drawing on interviews with drug kingpins and a multi-sited
ethnography of the region, Van
Dun looks at the individual and collective practices that shape cocaine
flows in the Amazonian borderlands, particularly in the Bajo Amazonas
to which such flows have recently shifted. Rasmussen
explores how villagers in Ancash manage their perceived abandonment by
the state by deploying the idiom of abandonment in their relations with
the state.
Political economy perspectives are covered in two articles that deal
with mining, and more generally extractive industries, a sector of the
Peruvian economy that has received increased attention in the last few
decades as a consequence of its important growth and impact on society
and environment. Reflecting
similar concerns with institution-building as evident in the political
science articles discussed above, Orihuela compares environmental
protection policies related to mining in Peru and Chile. Schilling-Vacaflor
and Flemmer similarly consider the issue of institutional strength in
assessing the conditions in which the Peruvian prior-consultation law
can function effectively.
History, though usually constituting up to half of the articles
submitted to the journal, is relatively under-represented in the sample.
In a pioneering article, Anna
Cant explores the visual economy of the Revolutionary Government of the
Armed Forces, and provides an insightful analysis of the ideas the
Velasco regime sought to convey through its agrarian reform poster
campaign. In a review essay, meanwhile, Paul
Gootenberg revisits a field of scholarship, on the history of state
making and development policy, that he helped to shape, in order to
survey recent scholarly contributions, noting the shift away from
structuralist and dependency perspectives to a more ‘political turn’.
Whether general conclusions can be drawn from this small sample of
articles on Peru published in the journal is unclear. Perhaps the
apparent high representation of political science and lower than normal
representation of history is a reflection of recent developments in
Peruvian academia, which has seen an expansion in political science
scholarship. The focus on institution building and the quality of
democratic institutions in several articles is certainly consonant with
dominant concerns of Peruvianist scholarship in recent years, as
political scientists and others attempt to make sense of both the
internal armed conflict of the 1980s and 1990s and the authoritarian
turn under Fujimori.
The very first issue of the Journal of Latin American Studies,
published in May 1969, included a now classic seminal article on
peasant uprisings in La Convención, in Cuzco department, by Eric
Hobsbawm. As this special issue shows, JLAS continues to publish
groundbreaking scholarship on Peru that reflects new, as well as older
and still relevant, themes and approaches. As editors, we hope that such
articles will help those who attend the LASA conference in Lima, and
indeed, those who do not, to gain a better understanding of Peru and, as
historian Jorge Basadre famously put it, of its problems and
possibilities.