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Authors

  • Carlos Gilberto Zárate Botía Universidad Nacional de Colombia
Vol. 10 No. 1 (2017), Articles, pages 113-136
DOI: https://doi.org/10.30827/revpaz.v10i1.5324
Submitted: Nov 8, 2016 Accepted: Jun 5, 2017 Published: Jul 21, 2017

Abstract

The Amazonian border region of Brazil, Colombia and Peru has been place or stage to extraction, trade and transport of a wide variety of forest and aquatic resources, including those associated with activities considered illegal like drug or some types of mining. Aditionally the borders have also been converted in areas of conflict, violence and insecurity, and these, at the same time, are produced and exacerbated by state and institutional weakness of the three states, trying substitute it increasing the military presence, with little and contested results, on the one hand, by different public policies or the existence of rules and laws also different and incompatible. In a historical and current perspective, the article shows the relationship between the state, extractive economies of natural resources and conflict in the brazilian, colombian and peruvian amazon border, taking into account the limitations and possibilities of agreements recently signed between the government Colombian Juan Manuel Santos and FARC guerrillas.

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