Constructing more inclusive political spaces has been a central concern
of social movements in postcolonial societies. This book engages with
Ecuador's recent processes of political transformation by questioning to
what extent these contribute to a decolonization of Ecuador's democracy.
Based on visual ethnographic research in Ecuadorian local politics, it
interrogates the effect of women's and indigenous people's political
participation on building more inclusive, intercultural political
spaces. The volume develops a poststructuralist electoral geography
capturing the embodied, emotional, and intersectional performances that
produce political spaces. In doing so, it breaks new empirical ground
and expands the field of electoral geography, connecting it to current
conceptual debates in human geography. Carolin Schurr was granted the
Schweizer Preis fur Lateinamerikaforschung der Fonds fur Schweizer
Lateinamerikaforschung 2014 (Swiss Award for Research on Latin America).