Abstract
Appeal to ethnic or racial identity may become a basis for group cohesion and organization enhancing ability to compete politically. Blacks in Chicaloma were able to monopolize local political offices by organizing as a distinct constituency. While phenotypical distinctiveness acts as a barrier to ethnic cooptation of the more mobile, a pattern that has prevented the emergence of ethnic politics affecting Indians in the Andean countries, black identity is not emphasized because eventual assimilation of family lines is envisioned.
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CITATION STYLE
LÉONS, M. B. (1978). race, ethnicity, and political mobilization in the Andes. American Ethnologist, 5(3), 484–494. https://doi.org/10.1525/ae.1978.5.3.02a00040
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