Dictionary Definition
Bolivia
Noun
1 a landlocked Republic in central South America;
Simon Bolivar founded Bolivia in 1825 after winning independence
from Spain [syn: Republic
of Bolivia]
2 a form of canasta in which sequences can be
melded
User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɪviə
Proper noun
- a country in South America. Official name: Republic of Bolivia.
Translations
- Bosnian: Bolivija
- Breton: Bolivia
- Chinese: 玻利维亚 (Bōlìwéiyà)
- Croatian: Bolivija
- Czech: Bolívie
- Danish: Bolivia
- Dutch: Bolivia, Bolivië
- Esperanto: Bolivio
- Estonian: Boliivia
- Finnish: Bolivia
- French: Bolivie
- German: Bolivien
- Greek: Βολιβία (Volivía)
- Hungarian: Bolívia
- Irish: an Bholaiv
- Interlingua: Bolivia
- Italian: Bolivia
- Japanese: ボリビア
- Korean: 볼리비아 (bol'libia)
- Maltese: il-Bolivja
- Norwegian: Bolivia
- Polish: Boliwia
- Portuguese: Bolívia
- Romanian: Bolivia
- Russian: Боливия
- Serbian:
- Slovak: Bolívia
- Spanish: Bolivia
- Swedish: Bolivia
- Turkish: Bolivya
See also
Breton
Proper noun
Bolivia- Bolivia
Danish
Proper noun
Bolivia- Bolivia
Dutch
Pronunciation
Proper noun
Bolivia- Bolivia
Interlingua
Proper noun
Bolivia- Bolivia
Italian
Proper noun
BoliviaDerived terms
Norwegian
Proper noun
BoliviaRelated terms
Romanian
Proper noun
Bolivia- Bolivia
Spanish
Pronunciation
Proper noun
es-proper noun f- Bolivia
Swedish
Proper noun
Bolivia- Bolivia
Extensive Definition
The Republic of Bolivia (, ), named after
Simón Bolívar, is a landlocked
country in central South
America. It is bordered by Brazil on the north
and east, Paraguay and
Argentina
on the south, and Chile and Peru on the west. From
1839 Sucre
was the seat of government until the administrative capital was moved to La Paz in 1898.
Sucre remains the constitutional capital and seat of the Supreme
Court (Corte Suprema de Justicia).
History
Colonial period
The territory now known as Bolivia was called "Upper Peru" and was under the authority of the Viceroy of Lima. Local government came from the Audiencia de Charcas located in Chuquisaca (La Plata—modern Sucre). By the late 16th century Bolivian silver accounted for one-fifth of the Spanish empire's total budget. A steady stream of natives served as labor force (the Spanish employed the pre-Columbian draft system called the mita). As Spanish royal authority weakened during the Napoleonic wars, sentiment against colonial rule grew.The Republic and economic instability (1809)
The struggle for independence started in 1809, but sixteen years of war followed before the republic was proclaimed, named for Simón Bolívar, on August 6, 1825 (see Bolivian War of Independence).In 1836, Bolivia, under the rule of Marshal Andres
de Santa Cruz, invaded Peru to reinstall the deposed president,
General
Luis
Orbegoso. Peru and Bolivia formed the Peru-Bolivian
Confederation, with de Santa Cruz as the Supreme Protector.
Following tensions between the Confederation and Chile, war was
declared by Chile on December 28, 1836. Argentina, Chile's ally,
declared war on the Confederation on May 9, 1837. The
Peruvian-Bolivian forces achieved several major victories: the
defeat of the Argentinian expedition and the defeat of the first
Chilean expedition on the fields of Paucarpata near
the city of Arequipa.
On the same field the Paucarpata
Treaty was signed with the unconditional surrender of the
Chilean and Peruvian rebel army. The treaty assured the Chilean
withdrawal from Peru-Bolivia, the return of captured Confederate
ships, normalized economic relations, and the payment of Peruvian
debt to Chile by the Confederation. Public outrage over the treaty
forced the government to reject it. The Chileans organized a second
expeditionary force, and attacked the Peru-Bolivian confederation,
defeating the Confederation on the fields of Yungay
using the same arms and equipment Santa Cruz had allowed them to
retain. After this defeat, Santa Cruz fled to Ecuador, and the
Peruvian-Bolivian Confederation was dissolved.
Following the independence of Peru, General Gamarra,
the Peruvian president, invaded Bolivia, under the Peruvian flag.
The Peruvian army was decisively defeated at the Battle
of Ingaví on November 20, 1841, where General Gamarra was
killed. The Bolivian army under General José
Ballivián then mounted a counter-offensive managing to capture
the Peruvian port of Arica. Later, both
sides signed a peace in 1842 putting a final end to the war.
Because of a period of political and economic
instability in the early to middle nineteenth century, Bolivia's
weakness was demonstrated during the War of
the Pacific (1879–83), during which it lost its
access to the sea, and the adjoining rich nitrate fields, together with
the port of Antofagasta, to
Chile. Since
independence, Bolivia has lost over half of its territory to
neighboring countries because of wars. Bolivia also lost the
state of
Acre (known for its production of rubber) when Brazil persuaded
the state of Acre to secede from Bolivia in 1903 (see the Treaty
of Petrópolis).
An increase in the world price of silver brought Bolivia a measure
of relative prosperity and political stability in the late 1800s.
During the early part of the twentieth century, tin replaced silver as the country's
most important source of wealth. A succession of governments
controlled by the economic and social elite followed laissez-faire
capitalist
policies through the first thirty years of the twentieth
century.
Living conditions of the native people, who
constituted most of the population, remained deplorable. Forced to
work under primitive conditions in the mines and in nearly feudal
status on large estates, they were denied access to education,
economic opportunity, or political participation. Bolivia's defeat
by Paraguay in the
Chaco
War (1932–35) marked a turning-point.
Rise of the Nationalist Revolutionary Movement (1951)
The
Nationalist Revolutionary Movement (MNR) emerged as a broadly
based party. Denied their victory in the 1951 presidential
elections, the MNR led the successful 1952 revolution. Under
President Víctor
Paz Estenssoro, the MNR , having strong popular pressure,
introduced universal
suffrage into his political platform, and carried out a
sweeping land-reform promoting rural education and nationalization
of the country's largest tin-mines.
Twelve years of tumultuous rule left the MNR
divided. In 1964, a military junta
overthrew President Paz Estenssoro at the outset of his third term.
The 1969 death of President
René Barrientos Ortuño, a former member of the junta elected
President in 1966, led to a succession of weak governments. Alarmed
by public disorder and the rising Popular Assembly, the military,
the MNR, and others installed Colonel (later General) Hugo
Banzer Suárez as President in 1971. Banzer ruled with MNR
support from 1971 to 1974. Then, impatient with schisms in the
coalition, he replaced civilians with members of the armed forces
and suspended political activities. The economy grew impressively
during most of Banzer's presidency, but human rights
violations and eventual fiscal crises undercut his support. He was
forced to call elections in 1978, and Bolivia again entered a
period of political turmoil.
Military governments: García Meza and Siles Zuazo (1978)
Elections in 1979 and 1981 were inconclusive and marked by fraud. There were coups d'état, counter-coups, and caretaker governments. In 1980, General Luis García Meza Tejada carried out a ruthless and violent coup d'état that did not have popular support. He pacified the people by promising to remain in power only for one year. (At the end of the year, he staged a televised rally to claim popular support and announced, "Bueno, me quedo," or, "All right; I'll stay [in office]." He was deposed shortly thereafter.) His government was notorious for human-rights-abuses, narcotics-trafficking, and economic mismanagement; during his presidency, the inflation that would later cripple the Bolivian economy could already be felt. Later convicted in absentia for various crimes, including murder, García Meza was extradited from Brazil and began serving a thirty-year sentence in 1995.After a military rebellion forced out García Meza
in 1981, three other military governments in fourteen months
struggled with Bolivia's growing problems. Unrest forced the
military to convoke the Congress
elected in 1980 and allow it to choose a new chief executive. In
October 1982, twenty-two years after the end of his first term of
office (1956-60), Hernán
Siles Zuazo again became President.
Sánchez de Lozada and Banzer: Liberalizing the economy (1993-2001)
Sánchez de Lozada pursued an aggressive economic and social reform agenda. The most dramatic change undertaken by the Sánchez de Lozada government was the "capitalization" program, under which investors, typically foreign, acquired 50% ownership and management control of public enterprises, such as the state oil corporation, telecommunications system, airlines, railroads, and electric utilities in return for agreed upon capital investments. The reforms and economic restructuring were strongly opposed by certain segments of society, which instigated frequent and sometimes violent protests, particularly in La Paz and the Chapare coca-growing region, from 1994 through 1996. The Sánchez de Lozada government pursued a policy of offering monetary compensation for voluntary eradication of illegal coca by its growers in the Chapare region. The policy produced little net reduction in coca, and in the mid-1990s Bolivia accounted for about one-third of the world's coca that was being processed into cocaine.During this time, the umbrella labor-organization
of Bolivia, the Central Obrera Boliviana (COB), became increasingly
unable to effectively challenge government policy. A teachers'
strike in 1995 was defeated because the COB could not marshal the
support of many of its members, including construction- and
factory-workers. The state also used selective martial law to keep
the disruptions caused by the teachers to a minimum. The teachers
were led by Trotskyites, and were considered to be the most
militant union in the COB. Their downfall was a major blow to the
COB, which also became mired in internal corruption and infighting
in 1996.
In the 1997 elections, General Hugo Banzer,
leader of the
ADN party and former dictator (1971-1978), won 22% of the vote,
while the MNR candidate won 18%. General Banzer formed a coalition
of the ADN, MIR, UCS, and CONDEPA parties, which held a majority of
seats in the Bolivian Congress. The Congress elected him as
president, and he was inaugurated on August 6,
1997. During
the election-campaign, General Banzer had promised to suspend the
privatization of the state-owned oil-company, YPFB. Considering the
weak position that Bolivia was in vis-à-vis international
corporations, however, this seemed unlikely.
The Banzer government basically continued the
free-market and privatization-policies of its predecessor, and the
relatively robust economic growth of the mid-1990s continued until
about the third year of its term in office. After that, regional,
global and domestic factors contributed to a decline in economic
growth. Financial crises in Argentina and Brazil, lower world
prices for export-commodities, and reduced employment in the
coca-sector depressed the Bolivian economy. The public also
perceived a significant amount of public-sector corruption. These
factors contributed to increasing social protests during the second
half of Banzer's term.
At the outset of his government, President Banzer
launched a policy of using special police-units to physically
eradicate the illegal coca of the Chapare region. The policy
produced a sudden and dramatic four-year decline in Bolivia's
illegal coca-crop, to the point that Bolivia became a relatively
small supplier of coca for cocaine. Those left unemployed by
coca-eradication streamed into the cities, especially El Alto, the
slum-neighborhood of La Paz. The MIR of Jaime Paz Zamora remained a
coalition-partner throughout the Banzer government, supporting this
policy (called the Dignity Plan).
On August 6
2001, Banzer
resigned from office after being diagnosed with cancer. He died less than a year
later. Banzer's Vice President, Jorge Fernando
Quiroga Ramírez, completed the final year of his term.
2002 elections
Quiroga was constitutionally prohibited from running for national office in 2002.In the June 2002 national elections, former
President
Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada (MNR) placed first with 29.5% of the
vote, followed by coca-advocate and native peasant-leader Evo Morales
(Movement
Toward Socialism, MAS) with 20.9%. Morales edged out populist
candidate Manfred
Reyes Villa of the New
Republican Force (NFR) by just 700 votes nationwide, earning a
spot in the congressional run-off against Sánchez de Lozada on
August
4, 2002.
A July agreement between the MNR and the
fourth-place MIR, which had again been led in the election by
former president Jaime Paz
Zamora, virtually ensured the election of Sánchez de Lozada in
the congressional run-off, and on August 6 he was
sworn in for the second time. The MNR platform featured three
overarching objectives: economic reactivation (and job creation),
anti-corruption,
and social inclusion.
Contemporary social crisis and the nationalization of hydrocarbon resources (2000-2005)
2005 elections
sync History of Bolivia The 2005 Bolivian presidential election was held on December 18, 2005. The two main candidates were Juan Evo Morales Ayma of the Movement Toward Socialism (MAS) Party, and Jorge Quiroga, leader of the Democratic and Social Power (PODEMOS) Party and former head of the Acción Democrática Nacionalista (ADN) Party.Morales won the election with 53.740% of the
votes, an absolute
majority unusual in Bolivian elections. He was sworn in on
January
22 2006
for a five-year term. Prior to his official inauguration in La Paz,
he was inaugurated in an Aymara ritual at the archeological site of
Tiwanaku
before a crowd of thousands of Aymara people and representatives of
leftist movements from across Latin America. Though highly
symbolic, this ritual was not historically based and primarily
represented native Aymaras — not the main Quechua-speaking
population. Since the Spanish conquest in the early 1500s, this
region of South America, with a majority native population, has
been ruled mostly by descendants of European immigrants, with only
a few mestizo (mixed
European and indigenous) rulers. Morales, an Aymara, has stated
that the five hundred years of colonialism are now over and that
the era of autonomy has begun.
His recent presidential election victory has also
brought new attention to the U.S. drug-war in South America and its
heavy emphasis on coca-crop-eradication.
The US-supported "Plan Dignidad" (dignity-plan), which seeks to
reduce cocaine-production to zero, is seen by many Bolivians as an
attack on their livelihoods and way of life. Morales, a leader
among coca-growers, has said his government will try to interdict
drugs, but he wants to preserve the legal market for coca-leaves and promote export of
legal coca-products. On May 1 2006, Morales
announced his intent to re-nationalize Bolivian hydrocarbon assets.
While stating that the nationalization-initiative would not be an
expropriation, Morales sent Bolivian troops to occupy fifty-six
gas-installations simultaneously. Troops were also sent to the two
Petrobras-owned
refineries in Bolivia, which provide over 90% of Bolivia's
refining-capacity. A deadline of 180 days was announced, by which
all foreign energy-firms were required to sign new contracts giving
Bolivia majority ownership and as much as 82% of revenues (the
latter for the largest natural-gas-fields). That deadline has since
passed, and all such firms have signed contracts. Reports from the
Bolivian government and the companies involved are contradictory as
to plans for future investment. By far the biggest customer for
Bolivian hydrocarbons has been Brazil, which imports two-thirds of
Bolivia's natural gas via pipelines operated by the huge
semi-private Petrobras (PBR). Since gas can only be exported from
landlocked Bolivia via PBR's large (and expensive) pipelines, the
supplier and customer are strongly linked. How the nationalization
will unfold is quite uncertain, as PBR has announced plans to
produce sufficient natural gas by 2011 to replace that now supplied
by Bolivia. Bolivia's position is strengthened both by the
knowledge that hydrocarbon-reserves are more highly valued now than
at the times of previous nationalizations, and by the pledged
support of President Hugo
Chávez of Venezuela.
Fulfilling a campaign promise, Morales opened on
August
6, 2006
the
Bolivian Constituent Assembly to begin writing a new
constitution aimed at giving more power to the indigenous majority.
Problems immediately arose when, unable to garner the two-thirds
votes needed to include controversial provisions in the
constitutional draft, Morales' party announced that only a simple
majority (50%+) would be needed to draft individual articles while
two-thirds needed to pass the document in full. Violent protests
arose in December 2006 in parts of the country for both two-thirds
and departmental autonomy; mostly in the eastern third of the
country, where much of the hydrocarbon wealth is located.
Conservative sectors in this region threaten to secede from the
nation if their demands are not met. MAS and its supports believed
two-thirds voting rules would give an effective veto for all
constitutional changes to the conservative minority. Later in
August 2007, more conflicts arose in Sucre, as the city demanded
the discussion of the seat of government inside the assembly,
hoping the executive and legislative branch could return to the
city, but the city faced denial from the assembly and the
government who pointed out that the demand was overwhelmingly
impractical and politically undesirable. With the conflict turning
into violence, the assembly was moved to a military area in Oruro.
Although the main opposition party boycotted the session, a
constitutional draft was approved on November 24. Subsequent riots,
whipped up by opposition mercenary groups, left three dead.
In January 2007 a clash between middle class city
dwellers and poorer rural campesinos left two dead and
over 130 injured in the central city of Cochabamba. The
campesinos had paralyzed the city by blockading the highways,
bridges, and main roads, and days earlier had set fire to the
departmental seat of government, trying to force the resignation of
the elected Prefect of Cochabamba, Manfred
Reyes Villa after he demanded a re-vote on departmental
autonomy having been previously defeated by popular vote. The city
dwellers clashed with the campesinos, breaking the blockade and
routing the protesters, while the police did little to interfere on
either side. Further attempts by the campesinos to reinstate the
blockade and threaten the government were unsuccessful, but the
underlying tensions have not been resolved.
Politics
The 1967 constitution, amended in 1994, provides for balanced executive, legislative, and judicial powers. The traditionally strong executive, however, tends to overshadow the Congress, whose role is generally limited to debating and approving legislation initiated by the executive. The judiciary, consisting of the Supreme Court and departmental and lower courts, has long been riddled with corruption and inefficiency. Through revisions to the constitution in 1994, and subsequent laws, the government has initiated potentially far-reaching reforms in the judicial system and processes.Bolivia's nine departments
received greater autonomy under the Administrative Decentralization
law of 1995. Departmental autonomy further increased with the first
popular elections for departmental governors (prefectos) on
18
December 2005, after long
protests by pro-autonomy-leader department of Santa
Cruz.
Bolivian cities and towns are governed by directly elected
mayors and councils.
Municipal elections were held on 5 December
2004, with
councils elected to five-year terms. The Popular Participation Law
of April 1994, which distributes a significant portion of national
revenues to municipalities for discretionary use, has enabled
previously neglected communities to make striking improvements in
their facilities and services.
The president is elected to a five-year term by
popular vote. Elected president
Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada resigned in October 2003, and was
substituted by Vice-president Carlos Mesa.
Mesa was in turn replaced by chief justice of the Supreme Court
Eduardo
Rodríguez in June 2005. Six months later, on December 18, 2005,
the Socialist native leader, Evo Morales,
was elected president.
Legislative branch
Bolivia's government is a republic. The Congreso Nacional (National Congress) has two chambers. The Cámara de Diputados (Chamber of Deputies) has 130 members elected to five-year terms, seventy from single-member districts (circunscripciones) and sixty by proportional representation. The Cámara de Senadores (Chamber of Senators) has twenty-seven members (three per department), elected to five-year terms.Bolivia has had a total of 193 coups d'etat from
independence until 1981, thereby averaging a change of government
once every ten months. Credit for the past quarter century of
relative political stability is largely attributed to President
Víctor
Paz Estenssoro, who ceded power peacefully after cutting
hyperinflation
which reached as high as 14,000 percent.
Military
The Bolivian military comprises three branches: an Army, Navy and Air Force. The legal age for voluntary admissions is 18; however, when the numbers are small the government recruits anyone as young as 14. It is estimated that 20% of the Bolivian army is between the ages 14 and 16 while another 20% is from 16 to 18. The tour of duty is generally 12 months. The Bolivian government annually spends $130 million on defense.Departments and provinces
Bolivia is divided into nine departments (departamentos); capitals in parentheses:- Beni (Trinidad)
- Chuquisaca (Sucre)
- Cochabamba (Cochabamba)
- La Paz (La Paz)
- Oruro (Oruro)
- Pando (Cobija)
- Potosí (Potosí)
- Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz de la Sierra)
- Tarija (Tarija)
Additionally, the departments are further divided
into 100 provinces (provincias), and the provinces are each divided
into municipalities (municipios) and cantons (cantones), which
handle local affairs.
Geography
At 1,098,580 km² (424,135 mi²), Bolivia is the world's 28th-largest country (after Ethiopia). It is comparable in size to Mauritania, and it has about 1.5 times the area of the US state of Texas.Bolivia has been a landlocked nation since 1879,
when it lost its coastal department of Litoral
to Chile in
the War of
the Pacific. However, it does have access to the Atlantic via
the Paraguay
River.
An enormous diversity of ecological zones are
represented within Bolivia's territory. The western highlands of
the country are situated in the Andes Mountains and
include the Bolivian Altiplano. The
eastern lowlands include large sections of Amazonian rainforests and Chaco. The highest
peak is Nevado
Sajama at 6,542 metres
(21,463 ft)
located in the department of Oruro. Lake
Titicaca is located on the border between Bolivia and Peru. The Salar de
Uyuni, the world's largest salt flat, lies
in the southwest corner of the country, in the department of
Potosí.
Economy
Bolivia is the poorest country in South America. The country is rich in natural resources, and has been called a "donkey sitting on a gold-mine" because of this. Bolivia's 2002 gross domestic product (GDP) totaled USD $7.9 billion. Economic growth is about 2.5% a year, and inflation was expected to be between 3% and 4% in 2002 (it was under 2% in 2001).Bolivia’s current lackluster economic situation
can be linked to several factors from the past three decades. The
first major blow to the Bolivian economy came with a dramatic fall
in the price of tin during the early 1980s, which impacted one of
Bolivia’s main sources of income and one of its major
mining-industries. The second major economic blow came at the end
of the Cold War in the late 1980s and early 1990s as economic aid
was withdrawn by western countries who had previously tried to keep
a market-liberal regime in power through financial support.
Since 1985, the government of Bolivia has
implemented a far-reaching program of macroeconomic stabilization
and structural reform aimed at maintaining price-stability,
creating conditions for sustained growth, and alleviating scarcity.
A major reform of the customs-service in recent years has
significantly improved transparency in this area. The most
important structural changes in the Bolivian economy have involved
the capitalization of numerous public-sector enterprises.
Parallel legislative reforms have locked into
place market-liberal policies, especially in the hydrocarbon- and
telecommunication-sectors, that have encouraged private investment.
Foreign investors are accorded national treatment, and foreign
ownership of companies enjoys virtually no restrictions in Bolivia.
The government has a long-term sales-agreement to sell natural gas
to Brazil through 2019. The government expects to hold a binding
referendum in 2004 on plans to export natural gas.
In April 2000, Bechtel signed a
contract with Hugo Banzer,
the former president of Bolivia, to privatize the water-supply in
Bolivia's third-largest city, Cochabamba.
Shortly thereafter, the company tripled the water-rates in that
city, an action which resulted in
protests and rioting among those who could no longer afford
clean water. Drawing water from community wells or gathering
rainwater was made illegal. Amidst Bolivia's nationwide economic
collapse and growing national unrest over the state of the economy,
the Bolivian government was forced to withdraw the water
contract.
Bolivian exports were $1.3 billion in 2002, from
a low of $652 million in 1991. imports
were $1.7 billion in 2002. Bolivian tariffs are a uniformly low 10%,
with capital equipment charged only 5%. Bolivia's trade-deficit was
$460 million in 2002.
Bolivia's trade with neighboring countries is
growing, in part because of several regional preferential
trade-agreements it has negotiated. Bolivia is a member of the
Andean
Community and enjoys nominally free trade with other member
countries.
The United States remains Bolivia's largest
trading-partner. In 2002, the United States exported $283 million
of merchandise to Bolivia and imported $162 million. Agriculture
accounts for roughly 15% of Bolivia's GDP. Soybeans are the
major cash
crop, sold into the Andean Community market.
Bolivia's government remains heavily dependent on
foreign assistance to finance development-projects. At the end of
2002, the government owed $4.5 billion to its foreign creditors, with $1.6 billion of
this amount owed to other governments and most of the balance owed
to multilateral development-banks. Most payments to other
governments have been rescheduled on several occasions since 1987
through the Paris Club
mechanism. External creditors have been willing to do this because
the Bolivian government has generally achieved the monetary and
fiscal targets set by IMF programs since 1987, though economic
crises in recent years have undercut Bolivia's normally good
record. The rescheduling of agreements granted by the Paris Club
has allowed the individual creditor-countries to apply very soft
terms to the rescheduled debt. As a result, some countries
have forgiven substantial amounts of Bolivia's bilateral debt. The
U.S. government reached an agreement at the Paris Club meeting in
December 1995 that reduced by 67% Bolivia's existing debt-stock.
The Bolivian government continues to pay its debts to the
multilateral development banks on time. Bolivia is a beneficiary of
the
Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) and Enhanced HIPC
debt-relief-programs, which by agreement restricts Bolivia's access
to new soft loans.
Demographics
Bolivia's ethnic distribution is estimated to be 30% Quechua-speaking and 25% Aymara-speaking Amerindians. The largest of the approximately three-dozen native groups are the Quechuas (2.5 million), Aymaras (2 million), then Chiquitano (180,000), and Guaraní (125,000). So the full Amerindian population is at 55% and the remaining 30% is Mestizo (mixed Amerindian and European) and around 15% are Whites.The white population consists mostly of criollos,
which in turn consist of families of relatively unmixed Spanish
ancestry, descended from the early Spanish colonists. These have
formed much of the aristocracy since independence. Other smaller
groups within the white population are Germans who
founded the national airline Lloyd
Aereo Boliviano, as well as Italian,
American,
Basque,
Croatian,
Russian,
Polish and
other minorities, many of whose members descend from families that
have lived in Bolivia for several generations. Also noteworthy is
the Afro-Bolivian community that numbers more than 0.5% of the
population, descended from African slaves that were transported to
work in Brazil and then migrated westward into Bolivia. They are
mostly concentrated in the Yungas region
(Nor
Yungas and Sud
Yungas provinces) in the
department of La Paz, some three hours from La Paz city. There
are also Japanese
who are concentrated mostly in
Santa Cruz de la Sierra, and Middle
Easterners who became prosperous in commerce.
Bolivia is one of the least developed countries
in South America. Almost two-thirds of its people, many of whom are
subsistence farmers, live in poverty. Population-density ranges
from less than one person per square kilometer in the southeastern
plains to about ten per square kilometer (twenty-five per
sq. mi)
in the central highlands. As of 2006, the population is increasing
about 1.45% per year.
The great majority of Bolivians are Roman
Catholic (the official
religion), although Protestant
denominations are expanding strongly. Many Native communities
interweave pre-Columbian
and Christian symbols
in their worship. About
80% of the people speak Spanish
as their first
language, although the Aymara and Quechua languages are also
common. Approximately 90% of the children attend primary-school but
often for a year or less. The literacy-rate is low in many rural
areas, but, according to the CIA, the
literacy-rate is 87% nationwide, a rate similar to Brazil's,
but below the South American average.
Culture
Bolivian culture has been heavily influenced by
the Quechua, the
Aymara, as
well as by the popular cultures of Latin America as a whole.
The cultural development of what is present-day
Bolivia is divided into three distinct periods: pre-Columbian,
colonial, and republican. Important archaeological ruins, gold
and silver ornaments, stone monuments, ceramics, and weavings remain from several
important pre-Columbian cultures. Major ruins include Tiwanaku, Samaipata,
Incallajta, and
Iskanawaya. The
country abounds in other sites that are difficult to reach and have
seen little archaeological exploration.
The Spanish brought their own tradition of
religious art which, in the hands of local native and mestizo builders and artisans, developed into a rich
and distinctive style of architecture, painting, and sculpture known as "Mestizo
Baroque". The colonial period produced not only the paintings of
Pérez de Holguín, Flores, Bitti, and others but also the works of
skilled but unknown stonecutters, woodcarvers, goldsmiths, and silversmiths. An important
body of native baroque religious music of the colonial period was
recovered in recent years and has been performed internationally to
wide acclaim since 1994.
Bolivian artists of stature in the twentieth
century include Guzmán de Rojas, Arturo Borda, María Luisa Pacheco,
and Marina Núñez del Prado.
Bolivia has a rich folklore. Its regional folk music is
distinctive and varied. The "devil dances" at the annual carnival of Oruro are one of
the great folkloric events of South America, as is the lesser known
carnival at Tarabuco.
The best known of the various festivals found in
the country is the "Carnaval
de Oruro", which was among the first 19 "Masterpieces of the
Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity," as proclaimed by the
UNESCO in
May of 2001.
Entertainment includes football, which is the national
sport, as well as table
football, which is played on street-corners by both children
and adults.
References
Further reading
- Brusco, Elizabeth 1995 Reformation of Machismo: Evangelical Conversion and Gender in Colombia. Austin: University of Texas Press.
- Batalla, Guiellermo Bonfil 1996 México Profundo: Reclaiming a Civilization. Austin: University of Texas Press.
- Burdick, John 1993 Looking for God in Brazil: The Progressive Catholic Church in Urban Brazil’s Religious Arena. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Corten, André 1999 Pentecostalism in Brazil: Emotion of the Poor and Theological Romanticism. New York: St. Martin’s Press.
- Gill, Lesley 1990 “Like a Veil to Cover Them”: Women and the Pentecostal Movement in La Paz. American Ethnologist 17(4): 708-721.
- Gill, Lesley 2000 Teetering on the Rim: Global Restructuring, Daily Life, and the Armed Retreat of the Bolivian State. New York: Columbia University Press.
- Kray, Christine A.2002 The Pentecostal Re-Formation of Self: Opting for Orthodoxy in Yucatan. Ethos. 29(4):395-429.
- Martin, David.1990 Tongues of Fire: The Explosion of Protestantism in Latin America. Oxford: Blackwell.
- Morales, Waltraud Queiser 1992 Bolivia: Land of Struggle. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
- Stoll, David 1990 Is Latin America Turning Protestant? The Politics of Evangelical Growth. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Weber, Max 1930 [1984] The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. Trans. Talcott Preston. London:Counterpoint.
External links
sisterlinks Bolivia- Agencia Para el Desarrollo de la Sociedad de la Informacion en Bolivia Agency for the Development of the Society of Information in Bolivia. Official web portal of the Bolivian Government.
- Presidencia de la Republica de Bolivia Office of the President of the Republic of Bolivia.
- Vicepresidencia de la Republica de Bolivia, Presidencia del Congreso Nacional Web portal of the Office of the Vice-President of the Republic of Bolivia, President of the Senate and President of the Commission of Congress.
- Poder Judicial de la Republica de Bolivia Web portal of the Bolivian Judicial Branch, which includes the Supreme Court of Bolivia, Constitutional Court, Agrarian Tribunal, Superior Courts and Judicial Council.
- Congreso Nacional de la Republica de Bolivia Web portal of the Bolivian National Congress, which includes the Presidency of the National Congress, the National Senate and the House of Representatives.
- Corte Nacional Electoral Web portal of the National Electoral Court of Bolivia. Electoral Organism of Bolivia.
- Asamblea Constituyente de la Republica de Bolivia Web portal of the Constituent Assembly of Bolivia.
- Instituto Nacional de Estadistica Web portal of the Statistics National Institute of Bolivia.
- Public Opinion in Bolivia
- Election Tracker-Bolivia
- Bolivia-Online.net Information about Bolivia
- Encyclopaedia Britannica - Bolivia's Country Page
- Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding Bolivia
- The Spitting Llama Bookstore Maps and Books on Bolivia
- Bolivia Information Forum - news and background information
- Annotated map of Bolivia
- Ministerio de Defensa de Bolivia Ministry of Defense.
- Ejercito
- 'Coca is a way of life' (The Guardian's article)
- Project to strengthen the culture and the self reliance of the indigenous tribes of the Yuracaré and Trinitario
- Virtual Library of Public Health