Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T08:00:09.161Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Indigenous Voices and Votes: Assessing the Dynamics of Indigenous Politics in Chile’s Constitutional Referendum of 2022

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2024

Rodolfo Disi Pavlic*
Affiliation:
University of Santiago de Chile, Chile
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Many analysts have tried to discern the reasons behind the Chilean Constitutional Convention’s draft failure in the 2022 plebiscite. A significant explanation is the draft’s inclusion of indigenous rights and its plurinationality principle (Bargsted and González 2022). Despite Chile being unique in Latin America in its lack of constitutional recognition for its indigenous population (Acevedo 2021), most voters in indigenous areas appeared to have opposed the draft (Pairican 2022).1

Type
Constitution-Making in the 21st Century: Lessons from the Chilean Process
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of American Political Science Association

Many analysts have tried to discern the reasons behind the Chilean Constitutional Convention’s draft failure in the 2022 plebiscite. A significant explanation is the draft’s inclusion of indigenous rights and its plurinationality principle (Bargsted and González Reference Bargsted and González2022). Despite Chile being unique in Latin America in its lack of constitutional recognition for its indigenous population (Acevedo Reference Acevedo2021), most voters in indigenous areas appeared to have opposed the draft (Pairican Reference Pairican2022).Footnote 1

What role did indigenous peoples and politics play in the rejection of the constitutional draft? The 2020–2022 constitution-making process was unique by Chilean standards in its inclusion of indigenous perspectives.Footnote 2 The Constitutional Convention reserved seats for indigenous groups, elected their representatives through a special ballot, and had mechanisms for their consultation. The final draft proposed a plurinational state with indigenous representation and autonomy. Although some militant Mapuche groups abstained, many indigenous organizations viewed it as an avenue for greater political representation (Bidegain and Tricot Reference Bidegain and Tricot2021, 8–13). It addressed the limited electoral influence and absence of indigenous parties (Tricot and Bidegain Reference Tricot and Bidegain2020) and historic socioeconomic exclusions (Valenzuela, Toro, and Rojo Reference Valenzuela, Toro and Rojo2017) that have caused some groups to adopt violent resistance (Alberti et al. Reference Alberti, Luna, Toro and Gayo2023).

This study identifies several claims about the role played by indigenous politics in the defeat of the constitutional draft and then contrasts them with district-level evidence. I describe indigenous leaders’ explanations for the “Approve” option’s defeat and use municipal data to examine voting patterns. Results reveal that most voters in indigenous districts opposed the draft but also suggest variation by ethnicity and stronger Approve sentiment in areas affected by violence and in rural, indigenous territories.

INDIGENOUS VOICES AND THE DEFEAT OF THE NEW CONSTITUTION

This section lists and groups different explanations related to indigenous affairs offered by indigenous personalities after the September 4, 2022, plebiscite. I include views expressed in the press by the indigenous representatives elected to the reserved seats for the 10 legally recognized indigenous peoples in the Constitutional Convention,Footnote 3 as well as statements by other indigenous public figures.

A prevalent explanation underscores the importance of the Mapuche conflict. Violence during the process symbolized resistance to institutional solutions, influencing some to vote against the draft (Pairican Reference Pairican2022). Hugo Alcamán, who campaigned for the “Reject” option, stated that “the Mapuche people is against violence, as it demonstrated in the plebiscite” (Soto Reference Soto2022). Convention candidate Pedro Cayuqueo (Reference Cayuqueo2022) noted how the conflict caused disillusionment with political pathways among the Mapuche. Héctor Llaitul, leader of one of the main Mapuche militant organizations, criticized plurinationality for being “too statist and gradual” (Bauer Reference Bauer2022, 437). Representative Elisa Loncon pointed out that the Mapuche militant sector’s refusal to dialogue favored rejection (Cooperativa 2022). Additionally, others believe that indigenous representatives did not adequately condemn violence, distancing voters (Millaleo Reference Millaleo2022).

Another perspective highlights a disconnect between indigenous representatives and voters. The constitutional debate became elitist, using academic and technical language (Millaleo Reference Millaleo2022). Some claimed that “Plurinationality and other demands would only be the ideas of a handful of disconnected ÑuñoaFootnote 4 intellectuals who are out of touch with the real world” (Cayuqueo Reference Cayuqueo2022). Alvarado Lincopi and Llancaman (Reference Alvarado Lincopi and Llancaman2022) stressed the role played by “the lack of political instruments that link organizational and territorial processes with institutional and democratic political disputes.” Luis Penchuleo, director of Corporación Nacional de Desarrollo Indígena (CONADI),Footnote 5 emphasized the need for better political education and campaigning (Oviedo Reference Oviedo2022). Ariel León Bacián (Reference León Bacián2022), former Quechua legislative advisor to the Convention, also highlighted lackluster campaigning in indigenous territories.

Others believe that the content of the constitutional draft did not align with indigenous voters’ preferences. Yaghan representative Lidia González suggested that the negotiation process resulted in the inclusion of provisions that did not represent the people (La Prensa Austral 2022). Loncon discussed the influence of Western thought within indigenous communities, which distanced them from the draft’s principles (Biobio Chile Reference Chile2023). For some indigenous citizens, voting Reject might have been a way to assert their Chileanness (Cayuqueo Reference Cayuqueo2022), which Loncon mentioned as potential “indigenous whitening” (Huenchumil Reference Huenchumil2022). These testimonies align with survey data from Southern Chile (Centro de Estudios Públicos 2022), which indicates that the majority of Mapuche respondents identify either exclusively as Chilean or as both Chilean and Mapuche. Moreover, most express a preference for a multicultural state or one without distinctions among peoples rather than a plurinational state.

Other explanations revolve around the characteristics of indigenous communities. Javier García, the Aymara mayor of Colchane, noted that issues affecting his community (e.g., migration) were not addressed in the process (Mayorga Reference Mayorga2022). Aymara representative Luis Jiménez highlighted the Aymara’s conservative nature, preferring gradual change (Miranda Reference Miranda2022). Former governor Richard Caifal (Reference Caifal2022) also stated that the Mapuche favor less disruptive changes. Likewise, historian Sergio Caniuqueo argued that Mapuche society is socially conservative, which collided with the progressive constitutional text—particularly among Mapuche evangelicals (Miranda Reference Miranda2022). The presence of long-standing patron–client relationships with political parties in the Reject camp also could have had a decisive impact on the indigenous electorate (Cayuqueo Reference Cayuqueo2022). By contrast, in the case of Rapa Nui, the Convention’s text recognized it as a special territoryFootnote 6 and acknowledged the Agreement of Wills with the Chilean State (1888), which was considered “dignifying” by Pedro Edmunds Paoa, the island’s mayor (Gálvez, Canales, and Mayorga Reference Gálvez, Canales and Mayorga2022).

A DISTRICT-LEVEL ANALYSIS OF THE REJECT VOTE

To understand the link between indigenous peoples and Chile’s 2022 plebiscite results, I analyzed data from Chile’s 345 municipalities (comunas) using official sources (Instituto Nacional Electoral 2018; Servicio Electoral 2022) and protest-event data (Centro de Estudios de Conflicto y Cohesión Social 2020). This analysis sheds light on the indigenous dynamics in the outcome of the constitutional proposal (Disi Pavlic Reference Disi Pavlic2023b).

The bivariate analysis indicates that indigenous regions primarily rejected the constitutional draft (figure 1). The highest rejections occurred in Colchane, Camiña, and General Lagos, the three northern municipalities with significant Aymara populations (Disi Pavlic Reference Disi Pavlic2023a). A simple linear regression confirms this correlation’s statistical significance.

Figure 1 Reject Vote by Percentage of Indigenous Population

The analysis supports indigenous leaders’ claims that indigenous-related conflicts influenced the plebiscite. Districts with the most conflicts—Ercilla, Contulmo, and Lumaco—showed Reject rates of 72.6%, 81.2%, and 80.5%, respectively (figure 2). However, other variables should be considered. Given the intersection of ethnicity with variables such as poverty (Agostini, Brown, and Roman Reference Agostini, Brown and Roman2010) and electoral preferences (Fuentes, De Cea, and Teitelboim Reference Fuentes, De Cea and Teitelboim2019), controls are crucial.

Figure 2 Reject Vote by Number of Violent Protests with Indigenous Claims per 1,000 Inhabitants (2008–2021)

I used weighted linear (WLS) and generalized linear models (WGLM) with robust standard errors to evaluate the relationship between indigenous variables and plebiscite voting.Footnote 7 Indigenous populations were disaggregated by the 2017 census categories (i.e., Mapuche, Rapa Nui, Aymara, Atacameño, Quechua, Colla, Diaguita, Kawésqar, Yahgan, and OthersFootnote 8), acknowledging differing political inclinations across communities. The controls used were local mean years of schooling, population size, poverty and rural population rates, and share of votes for right-wing candidate Jose Antonio Kast in 2021, which reflected partisan stability in preexisting preferences in referendums (Leduc Reference Leduc2002). A measure of protests during the 2019 “social outburst” (Sáez-Vergara, Godoy, and Disi Pavlic Reference Sáez-Vergara, Godoy and Disi Pavlic2022) also is considered due to its association with preferences in the plebiscite (Disi Pavlic Reference Disi Pavlic2023a, 112). Figure 3 illustrates the regression coefficients of the indigenous variables in the WLS and WGLM models.

Figure 3 Weighted Least Squares and WGLM Regressions of Reject Vote by Violent Protests with Indigenous Claims (2008–2021) and Percentage of Indigenous Peoples, with 95% Confidence Intervals

Regression results counter the bivariate analysis and the testimonies of indigenous figures, which suggests a negative link between indigenous violence and the Reject vote. Each additional violent event corresponds to an approximate 1.1-percentage-point decrease in Reject votes. Individually assessing indigenous groups also adds complexity: a negative association between indigenous populations and Reject support was evident for both the Mapuche and the Rapa Nui.Footnote 9 This suggests, as some indigenous personalities noted, that factors beyond indigenous identity—such as preexisting political preferences, community size, and education—may have influenced indigenous districts against the draft. However, the positive correlation among the Diaguita and Kawésqar indicates that some indigenous groups opposed the draft, giving credence—for at least some groups—to the argument that the constitutional draft was not valued or understood by indigenous voters.

Most indigenous people reside in urban zones, but their presence in rural areas also is significant. The implications of this divide are politically consequential (Aravena Reference Aravena2003; González Reference González2021). The split also is important in economic terms because the socioeconomic exclusion of indigenous peoples is explained partly by rural residence (Valenzuela, Toro, and Rojo Reference Valenzuela, Toro and Rojo2017). A WLS model was used with an interaction term between the shares of the indigenous and rural populations. The predicted Reject-vote values were estimated across the observed ranges of indigenous population and for selected percentages of rural population (figure 4).Footnote 10 The results show how the Reject vote’s association with the indigenous population depends on rurality. The association was negative in rural areas but slightly positive in highly urban municipalities, which suggests that the constitutional draft resonated more with some indigenous voters in traditional settings than with the majority residing in cities. This result indicates that the claim that indigenous voters did not approve of the draft has more support in urban areas.

Figure 4 Adjusted Predictions of Reject Vote by Indigenous and Rural Populations

CONCLUSIONS

This study examines the relationship between indigenous affairs and the Reject-vote outcome in Chile’s 2022 constitutional plebiscite. Indigenous districts predominantly rejected the draft, despite its robust indigenous rights provisions and their involvement in the process. Statements from indigenous public figures highlighted four reasons for this rejection: the Mapuche conflict, a disconnect between indigenous representatives and their electorate, resistance to the draft’s indigenous content, and distinct ethnic-group dynamics.

Data from Chile’s 345 municipalities were used to evaluate and challenge these explanations. The results reveal that the Approve option was unpopular in almost all of the indigenous municipalities, underscoring the draft’s perceived inadequacy. Contrary to the expectations of the indigenous leaders, however, higher local violence correlated with decreased rejection of the draft. This suggests that in communities more affected by violence, some voters viewed the Approve option as a path toward conflict resolution. This aligns with findings from Colombia’s peace agreement referendum that communities struck by conflict often lean toward compromise (Botero Reference Botero2017; Branton et al. Reference Branton, DeMeritt, Pulido and Meernik2019; Tellez Reference Tellez2019). Likewise, the negative correlation with more episodes of conflict dovetails with the finding that the Mapuche conflict persists in communities with a stronger preexisting common identity and organization (Alberti et al. Reference Alberti, Luna, Toro and Gayo2023).

Contrary to the expectations of the indigenous leaders, however, higher local violence correlated with decreased rejection of the draft. This suggests that in communities more affected by violence, some voters viewed the Approve option as a path toward conflict resolution.

Different indigenous groups showed varied voting tendencies in the plebiscite. Higher Mapuche concentrations were negatively correlated with Reject voting, suggesting that some Mapuche voters favor options that reflect their ethnicity rather than inherently leaning conservative (Toro and Jaramillo-Brun Reference Toro and Jaramillo-Brun2014). The same is true for the Rapa Nui, who—as mentioned previously—positively perceived the draft due to specific articles tailored to their needs. However, for most ethnic groups, there was no clear association—which highlights broader reasons for the draft’s rejection.

Finally, the Approve option’s weaker performance among urban indigenous people suggests a disconnect between indigenous representatives and indigenous city dwellers. This is consistent with higher turnout in rural, indigenous districts in the 2021 elections for the reserved seats (Becerra and Morales Reference Becerra and Morales2022), and it challenges previous notions about the urban Mapuche’s priorities regarding constitutional recognition (Aravena et al. Reference Aravena, Cerda, Alcota and Zañartu2019, 19). Instead, it implies that urban indigenous voters had distinct preferences and they may have perceived the constitutional draft as more pertinent to their rural counterparts, particularly on issues such as land rights. These findings provide valuable insights for future processes and elections as indigenous peoples in Chile and elsewhere continue to seek political recognition.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This article benefited from valuable feedback from the reviewers and editors, as well as from comments by Joaquín Rozas-Bugueño. I also thank Félix Palma for his research assistance. This study received support from the Chilean National Agency for Research and Development (ANID) through a Fondecyt Regular grant (ANID/FONDECYT/1230733), and the Centre for Social Conflict and Cohesion Studies (ANID/FONDAP/15130009).

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT

Research documentation and data that support the findings of this study are openly available at the PS: Political Science & Politics Harvard Dataverse at https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/Z972VT.

Supplementary Material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit http://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096523000872.

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

The author declares that there are no ethical issues or conflicts of interest in this research.

Footnotes

1. The municipality of Rapa Nui was the only exception—it was one of only eight districts in which the Approve option won.

2. It also may be considered, however, as the latest example of the wave of “multicultural constitutionalism” that has taken place in Latin America since 1991 (Van Cott Reference Van Cott2010).

3. These are the Mapuche, Rapa Nui, Aymara, Atacameño, Quechua, Colla, Diaguita, Kawésqar, Yahgan, and Chango peoples.

4. Ñuñoa is a municipality in Santiago noted for its progressive politics, learning institutions, and upper-middle-class residents (Radovic Reference Radovic2021).

5. CONADI is the government agency responsible for promoting and coordinating indigenous policy in the country.

6. The Juan Fernández Archipelago was the only other location elevated to special-territory status.

7. I used the total number of votes to weight the observations because municipalities have substantial differences in population size (Contreras and Morales Reference Contreras and Morales2015).

8. Changos were recognized after 2017 and, therefore, were not a separate category in the census. This people, as well as groups including the Huilliche and Pehuenche (which usually are categorized as Mapuche), were counted in the “Others” category.

9. The results for the Rapa Nui, therefore, resonate with the way that the constitutional draft was perceived by that group.

10. The remainder of the covariates are held at their mean values. A Wald test shows that the interaction term is statistically significant.

References

REFERENCES

Acevedo, Carolina. 2021. “Inclusión de Derechos Indígenas En Chile: Arquetipo Constituyente Desde América Latina.” Polis (Santiago) 20 (58): 2242.Google Scholar
Agostini, Claudio A., Brown, Philip H., and Roman, Andrei C.. 2010. “Poverty and Inequality Among Ethnic Groups in Chile.” World Development 38 (7): 1036–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alberti, Carla, Luna, Juan Pablo, Toro, Sergio, and Gayo, Eugenia. 2023. “The Long Memory of the Land: Pre-Colonial Origins of Mapuche Mobilization in Chile.” Political Geography 103:102890.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alvarado Lincopi, Claudio, and Llancaman, Martín. 2022. “Plebiscito y Escaños Reservados I.” El Mostrador, September 27. www.elmostrador.cl/noticias/opinion/2022/09/27/plebiscito-y-escanos-reservados-i.Google Scholar
Aravena, Andrea. 2003. “El Rol de La Memoria Colectiva y de La Memoria Individual En La Conversión Identitaria Mapuche.” Estudios Atacameños 26:8996.Google Scholar
Aravena, Andrea, Cerda, Claudia, Alcota, Pablo, and Zañartu, Natalia. 2019. “Identidad Étnica Mapuche e Imaginarios Sociales del Bienestar en la Región del Biobío, Chile.” Psicologia & Sociedade 31. www.scielo.br/j/psoc/a/qTmtWvYGw8hDkmBBR6YjZsx.Google Scholar
Bargsted, Matías, and González, Andrés. 2022. “¿Pesó la Desinformación en el Rechazo? Una Respuesta Estadística.” CIPER Chile, September 13. www.ciperchile.cl/2022/09/13/peso-la-desinformacion-en-el-rechazo-una-respuesta-estadistica.Google Scholar
Bauer, Kelly. 2022. “Untangling Elite Opposition to Indigenous Rights.” North American Congress on Latin America Report on the Americas 54 (4): 430–37.Google Scholar
Becerra, Ariel, and Morales, Mauricio. 2022. “Reserved Indigenous Seats and Electoral Turnout: Evidence from the Chilean Constitutional Convention.” Nationalism and Ethnic Politics 28 (4): 491504.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bidegain, Germán, and Tricot, Victor. 2021. “Escaños Reservados para los Mapuche en la Convención Constitucional: Una Rendija Institucional Gracias a la Revuelta.” Anuario del Conflicto Social 12:136.Google Scholar
Chile, Biobio. 2023. “Loncón y Triunfo Del Rechazo En Zonas Indígenas: ‘Fuimos Colonizados Por El Pensamiento Occidental.’” www.biobiochile.cl/noticias/nacional/chile/2023/03/07/loncon-y-triunfo-del-rechazo-en-zonas-indigenas-fuimos-colonizados-por-el-pensamiento-occidental.shtml.Google Scholar
Botero, Sandra. 2017. “El Plebiscito y Los Desafíos Políticos de Consolidar La Paz Negociada En Colombia.” Revista de Ciencia Política (Santiago) 37 (2): 369–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Branton, Regina, DeMeritt, Jacqueline, Pulido, Amalia, and Meernik, James D.. 2019. “Violence, Voting & Peace: Explaining Public Support for the Peace Referendum in Colombia.” Electoral Studies 61. www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0261379418304657.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caifal, Richard. 2022. “‘Las Personas Prefieren Cambios Menos Traumáticos.’” La Segunda 8.Google Scholar
Cayuqueo, Pedro. 2022. “Un Baño de Realidad.” www.pedrocayuqueo.cl/post/un-bano-de-realidad.Google Scholar
Centro de Estudios P ú blicos. 2022. “Encuesta CEP Especial No. 87, Febrero–Julio 2022.” CEP Chile. www.cepchile.cl/encuesta/encuesta-cep-especial-n-87-febrero-julio-2022.Google Scholar
Centro de Estudios de Conflicto y Cohesi ó n Social. 2020. “Observatory of Conflicts: Cumulative Dataset.” https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/GKQXBR.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Contreras, Gonzalo, and Morales, Mauricio. 2015. “El Sesgo de Clase Existió y Existe: Análisis de la Participación Electoral en Chile (Municipales 2012 y Presidenciales 2013).” In Condicionantes de la Participación Electoral en Chile, ed. United Nations Development Development Programme, 79114. Santiago, Chile: PNUD.Google Scholar
Cooperativa. 2022. “Elisa Loncon a dos Meses del Triunfo del Rechazo: ‘Todavía es Necesario Debatir la Plurinacionalidad.’” Cooperativa, November 4. https://cooperativa.cl/noticias/pais/politica/constitucion/elisa-loncon-a-dos-meses-del-triunfo-del-rechazo-todavia-es-necesario/2022-11-04/160917.html.Google Scholar
Disi Pavlic, Rodolfo. 2023a. “Apoyo a La Opción Rechazo En El Plebiscito Constitucional de 2022: Correlaciones a Nivel Comunal.” In El Proceso Constituyente Chileno (2019–2022): Análisis, Interpretaciones y Perspectivas, 103–40. Santiago, Chile: RIL Editores.Google Scholar
Disi Pavlic, Rodolfo. 2023b. “Replication Data for ‘Indigenous Voices and Votes: Assessing the Dynamics of Indigenous Politics in Chile’s Constitutional Referendum of 2022.’” PS: Political Science & Politics. DOI:10.7910/DVN/Z972VT.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fuentes, Claudio, De Cea, Maite, and Teitelboim, Berta. 2019. “Presidenciales Chilenas 2017: Por Quién y Cuánto Votan Los Indígenas.” Estudios Políticos 55:1436.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gálvez, Roberto, Canales, Ignacia, and Mayorga, Francisca. 2022. “Zoom a Las Ocho Comunas ‘Apruebistas’: Tres de Valparaíso, Cinco de La RM y Sólo Una Con Alcalde de Derecha.” La Tercera. www.latercera.com/la-tercera-pm/noticia/zoom-a-las-ocho-comunas-apruebistas-tres-de-valparaiso-cinco-de-la-rm-y-solo-una-con-alcalde-de-derecha/5ISUO4B3Y5CCDKS6ZEQ3IIRLSY.Google Scholar
González, Diego Andrés. 2021. “Traslados, Adopciones y Permanencias: Hibridación Del Habitar Aymara En La Frontera Norte de Chile.” Diálogo Andino 66:161–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huenchumil, Paula. 2022. “Elisa Loncon: ‘El Rechazo No Fue un Voto Ideológico Contra las Transformaciones, Fue un Voto Heterogéneo.’” Interferencia. https://interferencia.cl/articulos/elisa-loncon-el-rechazo-no-fue-un-voto-ideologico-contra-las-transformaciones-fue-un-voto.Google Scholar
Instituto Nacional Electoral. 2018. “Censo de Población y Vivienda 2017.” https://redatam-ine.ine.cl/redbin/RpWebEngine.exe/Portal?BASE=CENSO_2017&lang=esp.Google Scholar
La Prensa Austral. 2022. “Ex Constituyente Lidia González: ‘Chile es un País Racista y Clasista.’” La Prensa Austral, September 11. https://laprensaaustral.cl/2022/09/11/chile-es-un-pais-racista-y-clasista.Google Scholar
Leduc, Lawrence. 2002. “Opinion Change and Voting Behaviour in Referendums.” European Journal of Political Research 41 (6): 711–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
León Bacián, Ariel. 2022. “Chile, el Hazmerreír de los Procesos Constituyentes.” El Mostrador, September 19. www.elmostrador.cl/noticias/opinion/2022/09/19/chile-el-hazmerreir-de-los-procesos-constituyentes.Google Scholar
Mayorga, Francisca. 2022. “Alcaldes de Pueblos Originarios Atribuyen Triunfo Del Rechazo a Distancia Del Texto Con Demandas de La Ciudadanía.” La Tercera. www.latercera.com/nacional/noticia/alcaldes-de-pueblos-originarios-atribuyen-triunfo-del-rechazo-a-distancia-del-texto-con-demandas-de-la-ciudadania/VFKCB6CQQ5BK5PQZWRWBKWEIJY.Google Scholar
Millaleo, Salvador. 2022. “Como Aprendices de Brujo: El Rechazo a La Plurinacionalidad En Chile.” Debate Indígenas. https://debatesindigenas.org/notas/193-aprendices-de-brujo-rechazo-plurinacionalidad-chile.html.Google Scholar
Miranda, Elías. 2022. “Las Claves Para Entender Por Qué el Rechazo Ganó en las Comunas con Mayor Población Indígena.” Fast Check, October 4. www.fastcheck.cl/2022/10/04/las-claves-para-entender-por-que-el-rechazo-gano-en-las-comunas-con-mayor-poblacion-indigena.Google Scholar
Oviedo, Hugo. 2022. “‘La Población Mapuche No Entendió El Texto’: Director de La Conadi Tras Amplio Triunfo Del Rechazo.” Biobío Chile, September 5. www.biobiochile.cl/noticias/nacional/region-de-la-araucania/2022/09/05/amp/la-poblacion-mapuche-no-entendio-el-texto-director-de-la-conadi-tras-amplio-triunfo-del-rechazo.shtml.Google Scholar
Pairican, Fernando. 2022. “La Amenaza Indígena.” Revista Anfibia. www.revistaanfibia.com/la-amenaza-indigena.Google Scholar
Sáez-Vergara, Rocío, Godoy, Matías, and Disi Pavlic, Rodolfo. 2022. “Democracy in Tumultuous Times: Protests, Pandemic and Plebiscite in Chile.” Economía y Política 9 (2): 101–47.Google Scholar
Servicio Electoral de Chile. 2022. “Sitio Historico Resultados Electorales: Plebiscito 2022.” https://historico.servel.cl/servel/app/index.php?r=EleccionesGenerico&id=237.Google Scholar
Soto, Marcelo. 2022. “Hugo Alcamán, Dirigente Mapuche: ‘Todos los Gobiernos Vienen Acá y se Hacen los Simpáticos’|Ex-Ante.” www.ex-ante.cl/hugo-alcaman-dirigente-mapuche-todos-los-gobiernos-vienen-aca-y-se-hacen-los-simpaticos.Google Scholar
Tellez, Juan Fernando. 2019. “Worlds Apart: Conflict Exposure and Preferences for Peace.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 63 (4): 1053–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toro, Sergio, and Jaramillo-Brun, Nathalie. 2014. “Despejando Mitos Sobre El Voto Indígena En Chile: Preferencias Ideológicas y Adhesión Étnica En El Electorado Mapuche.” Revista de Ciencia Política (Santiago) 34 (3): 583604.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tricot, Víctor, and Bidegain, Germán. 2020. “En Busca de la Representación Política: El Partido Mapuche Wallmapuwen en Chile.” Estudios Sociológicos 38 (113): 375407.Google Scholar
Valenzuela, Macarena, Toro, Sergio, and Rojo, Félix. 2017. “Equal in Poverty, Unequal in Wealth: Ethnic Stratification in Chile, the Mapuche Case.” Bulletin of Latin American Research 36 (4): 526–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Cott, Donna Lee. 2010. “Indigenous Peoples’ Politics in Latin America.” Annual Review of Political Science 13 (1): 385405.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1 Reject Vote by Percentage of Indigenous Population

Figure 1

Figure 2 Reject Vote by Number of Violent Protests with Indigenous Claims per 1,000 Inhabitants (2008–2021)

Figure 2

Figure 3 Weighted Least Squares and WGLM Regressions of Reject Vote by Violent Protests with Indigenous Claims (2008–2021) and Percentage of Indigenous Peoples, with 95% Confidence Intervals

Figure 3

Figure 4 Adjusted Predictions of Reject Vote by Indigenous and Rural Populations

Supplementary material: File

Disi Pavlic supplementary material

Disi Pavlic supplementary material
Download Disi Pavlic supplementary material(File)
File 18.4 KB
Supplementary material: File

Disi_Pavlic_Dataset

Dataset

Download Disi_Pavlic_Dataset(File)
File