The Movement, the Mine and the Lake: New Forms of Maya Activism in Neoliberal Guatemala

This article explores the social, economic, cultural and political issues bound up in two matters relating to the environment in the Sololá and Lake Atitlán region of the Guatemalan Mayan highlands in 2004–2005: the violent breakup of an anti-mine protest and the various reactions to a tropical stor...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: J. T. Way
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-07-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/5/3/56
id doaj-0bfc005cbae241f0a4681f8fba5c4e61
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0bfc005cbae241f0a4681f8fba5c4e612020-11-25T00:03:46ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872016-07-01535610.3390/h5030056h5030056The Movement, the Mine and the Lake: New Forms of Maya Activism in Neoliberal GuatemalaJ. T. Way0Department of History, Georgia State University, 25 Park Place, NE, 20th Floor, Atlanta, GA 30303, USAThis article explores the social, economic, cultural and political issues bound up in two matters relating to the environment in the Sololá and Lake Atitlán region of the Guatemalan Mayan highlands in 2004–2005: the violent breakup of an anti-mine protest and the various reactions to a tropical storm that threatened the lake ecosystem. It views these events as part of a historical conjuncture and centers them in a larger discussion of Maya political activism, environmentalism and neoliberal development in Guatemala from the 1990s–mid-2010s. It begins with the transition from war to peace in the 1990s, charting how Maya participation in municipal politics soared even as the official Mayan movement waned as the state turned to neoliberalism. Zooming in on municipal development and politics in Sololá in the early 2000s, it then traces at the ground level how a decentralizing, “multicultural” state promoted political participation while at the same time undermining the possibility for that participation to bring about substantive change. The center of the article delves deeper into the conjuncture of the first decade of the new millennium. By mapping events in Sololá against development, agrarian transformation and rural urbanization, it argues that resilient Maya community structures, although unable to stop the exploitative tide, continued to provide local cohesion and advocacy. Activists and everyday citizens became more globally attuned in the 2000s. The article’s final section analyzes municipal plans made between 2007 and 2012, arguing that creating and controlling community structures became increasingly important to the state in a time when Guatemala’s “outward” global turn was accompanied by an “inward” turn as people confronted spiraling violence in their communities. Critics called young people apolitical, but in 2015, massive demonstrations led to the imprisonment of the nation’s president and vice-president, showing that there is a chapter of Guatemala’s history of activism yet to be written.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/5/3/56MayaGuatemalaenvironmentminingagriculturedevelopmentglobalizationpoliticsneoliberalismurbanization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. T. Way
spellingShingle J. T. Way
The Movement, the Mine and the Lake: New Forms of Maya Activism in Neoliberal Guatemala
Humanities
Maya
Guatemala
environment
mining
agriculture
development
globalization
politics
neoliberalism
urbanization
author_facet J. T. Way
author_sort J. T. Way
title The Movement, the Mine and the Lake: New Forms of Maya Activism in Neoliberal Guatemala
title_short The Movement, the Mine and the Lake: New Forms of Maya Activism in Neoliberal Guatemala
title_full The Movement, the Mine and the Lake: New Forms of Maya Activism in Neoliberal Guatemala
title_fullStr The Movement, the Mine and the Lake: New Forms of Maya Activism in Neoliberal Guatemala
title_full_unstemmed The Movement, the Mine and the Lake: New Forms of Maya Activism in Neoliberal Guatemala
title_sort movement, the mine and the lake: new forms of maya activism in neoliberal guatemala
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2016-07-01
description This article explores the social, economic, cultural and political issues bound up in two matters relating to the environment in the Sololá and Lake Atitlán region of the Guatemalan Mayan highlands in 2004–2005: the violent breakup of an anti-mine protest and the various reactions to a tropical storm that threatened the lake ecosystem. It views these events as part of a historical conjuncture and centers them in a larger discussion of Maya political activism, environmentalism and neoliberal development in Guatemala from the 1990s–mid-2010s. It begins with the transition from war to peace in the 1990s, charting how Maya participation in municipal politics soared even as the official Mayan movement waned as the state turned to neoliberalism. Zooming in on municipal development and politics in Sololá in the early 2000s, it then traces at the ground level how a decentralizing, “multicultural” state promoted political participation while at the same time undermining the possibility for that participation to bring about substantive change. The center of the article delves deeper into the conjuncture of the first decade of the new millennium. By mapping events in Sololá against development, agrarian transformation and rural urbanization, it argues that resilient Maya community structures, although unable to stop the exploitative tide, continued to provide local cohesion and advocacy. Activists and everyday citizens became more globally attuned in the 2000s. The article’s final section analyzes municipal plans made between 2007 and 2012, arguing that creating and controlling community structures became increasingly important to the state in a time when Guatemala’s “outward” global turn was accompanied by an “inward” turn as people confronted spiraling violence in their communities. Critics called young people apolitical, but in 2015, massive demonstrations led to the imprisonment of the nation’s president and vice-president, showing that there is a chapter of Guatemala’s history of activism yet to be written.
topic Maya
Guatemala
environment
mining
agriculture
development
globalization
politics
neoliberalism
urbanization
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/5/3/56
work_keys_str_mv AT jtway themovementthemineandthelakenewformsofmayaactivisminneoliberalguatemala
AT jtway movementthemineandthelakenewformsofmayaactivisminneoliberalguatemala
_version_ 1725432161755987968