This book is an ethnography of the native people of the Bajo Urubamba river in Peruvian Amazonia. Gow attempts to account for the fact that the people of this region appear to be very acculturated when compared to better-known indigenous Amazonian peoples. He argues that when native people's claims are viewed from the perspective of their own values, and in the context of their creation of life through the productive transformation of the forest and the commodity economy, they can be seen to …
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Social SciencesLawHistoryPrint BooksBusinessNonfictionAnthropology & ArchaeologyReal Estate & Property LawNative American StudiesLatin American HistoryLatinos & Latin AmericansEconomicsSocio-Cultural AnthropologyNative South American & Caribbean PeopleNative & Indigenous History - South America & CaribbeanSouth American HistoryEconomic ConditionsNative South American & Caribbean Peoples - General & MiscellaneousReal Property & Land Law - Land TenureNative South American & Caribbean Peoples - Law, Politics, & GovernmentNative South American Peoples - HistorySocio-Cultural Anthropology - General & MiscellaneousNative South American & Caribbean Peoples - Anthropology & SociologyPeru - HistoryEconomic Conditions in Latin AmericaIndians of South AmericaIndians of South America->Land tenureUrubamba River Valley (Peru)->Social conditions



