Environmental-Climate Policies and Indigenous Participation in Argentina: The Case of the National Climate Change Adaptation Plan 2030

This paper analyzes the participation of national Indigenous peoples' organizations in an environmental-climate public policy: Argentina’s National Adaptation Plan 2030 (2019–2022). The study is based on ethnographic fieldwork, semi-structured interviews, document analysis, and theoretical appr...

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Autor principal: Manzanelli, Macarena Del Pilar
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Escuela de Antropología - FHyA 2025
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Acceso en línea:https://revistadeantropologia.unr.edu.ar/index.php/revistadeantropologia/article/view/322
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Sumario:This paper analyzes the participation of national Indigenous peoples' organizations in an environmental-climate public policy: Argentina’s National Adaptation Plan 2030 (2019–2022). The study is based on ethnographic fieldwork, semi-structured interviews, document analysis, and theoretical approaches from political ecology and biopolitics. The analysis highlights, on one hand, Indigenous agency through formal-institutional and organizational arrangements aimed at ensuring participation in the Plan; and on the other, the persistence of structural state debts: a disconnect between discourses of recognition of diversity, institutional capacity, and a productive extractivist model based on the commodification of life and the environment. Furthermore, the research identifies alternatives introduced into the public-political debate—concepts and knowledge that emphasize communal life and underpin powerful proposals for alternative models of environmental and territorial development, such as Development with Identity, Buen Vivir, and Territory.