ABSTRACT

This book presents studies from across Latin America to take up the challenge of exploring the plurality of social inequalities from a global perspective. Accordingly, it identifies the structural forces of social inequalities on a world scale as they shape asymmetries observed in a wide array of phenomena, such as racial and gender inequality, urbanization, migration, commodity production, indigenous mobilization, ecological conflicts, and the "new middle class". A rich contribution to the study of the interconnections between the global social structure and multiple local and national hierarchies, Global Entangled Inequalities brings consistently together a variety of conceptual approaches, ranging from ethnographies to legal genealogies, and will therefore appeal to scholars across the social sciences with interests in social theory, power analysis, intersectionality studies, urban studies, and global social and environmental justice.

part |74 pages

Structuring inequalities

chapter |21 pages

Inequality

Toward a world-historical perspective

chapter |17 pages

Transregional articulations of law and race in Latin America

A legal genealogy of inequality

chapter |17 pages

The urban space and the (re)production of social inequalities

Decoupling income distribution and patterns of urbanization in Latin American cities 1

part |66 pages

Categorization

chapter |14 pages

The social imaginary of inequalities in Latin America

Is another view necessary?1

chapter |16 pages

Competing indigeneities

Being a (hyper)real ecowarrior in twenty-first-century Bolivia