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A tale of two 'others': Remembering the Garifuna indigenous voice in Belize's Toledo district

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A tale of two 'others': Remembering the Garifuna indigenous voice in Belize's Toledo district. / Gough, Alex.
In: Journal of Caribbean Studies, Vol. 50, No. 2, 31.07.2022, p. 3-45.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Gough A. A tale of two 'others': Remembering the Garifuna indigenous voice in Belize's Toledo district. Journal of Caribbean Studies. 2022 Jul 31;50(2):3-45. doi: 10.1353/crb.2022.a901612

Author

Gough, Alex. / A tale of two 'others' : Remembering the Garifuna indigenous voice in Belize's Toledo district. In: Journal of Caribbean Studies. 2022 ; Vol. 50, No. 2. pp. 3-45.

Bibtex

@article{ac20db0c21fc47ba86a7ffbaa31a7d06,
title = "A tale of two 'others': Remembering the Garifuna indigenous voice in Belize's Toledo district",
abstract = "For the past twenty-five years, Belize{\textquoteright}s Toledo District has been the theatre for one of the world{\textquoteright}s most recognised indigenous rights cases as the Toledo Maya have sought tangible recognition of their customary rights over their ancestral lands. It has been a battle fought through both domestic and regional courts, gaining notoriety for the first domestic invocation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples within the legal judgement. However, recent events have reminded that this contested land, one naturally dominated by Maya narratives in recent decades, is home to two indigenouspeoples. This piece adopts the indigenous lens to the Toledo Garifuna—the Afro-indigenous people who settled in Toledo following their exile from St Vincent. Despite receiving significant scholarly attention in Belize and beyond, the Garifuna role (or lack of) in the Maya land rights case is conspicuous by its absence in academic discourse. After outlining both peoples{\textquoteright} shared indigenous history in Toledo, the focus turns to discussing the reasons why the Garifuna did not join the Maya in their legal challenge, before finally considering the surge in Garifuna advocacy in recent years, one that must be welcomed with bothhope and caution.",
keywords = "Belize, Indigenous, Garifuna, Maya",
author = "Alex Gough",
year = "2022",
month = jul,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1353/crb.2022.a901612",
language = "English",
volume = "50",
pages = "3--45",
journal = "Journal of Caribbean Studies",
issn = "0008-6533",
publisher = "Universidad de Puerto Rico",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A tale of two 'others'

T2 - Remembering the Garifuna indigenous voice in Belize's Toledo district

AU - Gough, Alex

PY - 2022/7/31

Y1 - 2022/7/31

N2 - For the past twenty-five years, Belize’s Toledo District has been the theatre for one of the world’s most recognised indigenous rights cases as the Toledo Maya have sought tangible recognition of their customary rights over their ancestral lands. It has been a battle fought through both domestic and regional courts, gaining notoriety for the first domestic invocation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples within the legal judgement. However, recent events have reminded that this contested land, one naturally dominated by Maya narratives in recent decades, is home to two indigenouspeoples. This piece adopts the indigenous lens to the Toledo Garifuna—the Afro-indigenous people who settled in Toledo following their exile from St Vincent. Despite receiving significant scholarly attention in Belize and beyond, the Garifuna role (or lack of) in the Maya land rights case is conspicuous by its absence in academic discourse. After outlining both peoples’ shared indigenous history in Toledo, the focus turns to discussing the reasons why the Garifuna did not join the Maya in their legal challenge, before finally considering the surge in Garifuna advocacy in recent years, one that must be welcomed with bothhope and caution.

AB - For the past twenty-five years, Belize’s Toledo District has been the theatre for one of the world’s most recognised indigenous rights cases as the Toledo Maya have sought tangible recognition of their customary rights over their ancestral lands. It has been a battle fought through both domestic and regional courts, gaining notoriety for the first domestic invocation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples within the legal judgement. However, recent events have reminded that this contested land, one naturally dominated by Maya narratives in recent decades, is home to two indigenouspeoples. This piece adopts the indigenous lens to the Toledo Garifuna—the Afro-indigenous people who settled in Toledo following their exile from St Vincent. Despite receiving significant scholarly attention in Belize and beyond, the Garifuna role (or lack of) in the Maya land rights case is conspicuous by its absence in academic discourse. After outlining both peoples’ shared indigenous history in Toledo, the focus turns to discussing the reasons why the Garifuna did not join the Maya in their legal challenge, before finally considering the surge in Garifuna advocacy in recent years, one that must be welcomed with bothhope and caution.

KW - Belize

KW - Indigenous

KW - Garifuna

KW - Maya

U2 - 10.1353/crb.2022.a901612

DO - 10.1353/crb.2022.a901612

M3 - Journal article

VL - 50

SP - 3

EP - 45

JO - Journal of Caribbean Studies

JF - Journal of Caribbean Studies

SN - 0008-6533

IS - 2

ER -