"Radcliffe’s book, well grounded in theory and research, is an important read for scholars of Latin American development and gender. Highly recommended." - E. E. O'Connor (Choice) "Sarah Radcliffe's recent book offers a rich ethnography of indigenous women in Ecuador which specifically addresses how they encounter and experience development interventions." - Jessica Hope (Journal of Development Studies) "<i>Dilemmas of Difference</i> represents a timely contribution to the critical literature on indigenous women and development and to the debate of neoliberal instrumentalization of difference.... Overall, with a genealogy of development frameworks contrasted with indigenous women’s experience, Radcliffe demonstrates the persistence of postcolonial stereotypes and colonial assumptions of social difference that produce indigenous women’s dissatisfaction with development." - María Moreno (American Anthropologist) "Radcliffe’s book represents a powerful contribution to critical development studies and the discipline of geography." - Emily Billo (Journal of Latin American Geography)
Introduction. Development and Social Heterogeneity 1
1. Postcolonial Intersectionality and the Colonial Present 37
2. The Daily Grind: Ethnic Topographies of Labor, Racism, and Abandonment 75
Interlude I 121
3. Crumbs from the Table: Participation, Organization, and Indigenous Women 125
4. Politics, Statistics, and Affect: "Indigenous Women in Development" Policy 157
Interlude II 189
5. Women, Biopolitics, and Interculturalism: Ethnic Politics and Gendered Contradictions 193
6. From Development to Citizenship: Rights, Voice, and Citizenship Practices 225
7. Postcolonial Heterogeneity: Sumak Kawsay and Decolonizing Social Difference 257
Notes 291
Glossary 295
Bibliography 329
Index 359