Políticas de la justicia criminal interétnica en Córdoba del Tucumán (siglos XVI y XVII)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3989/aeamer.2003.v60.i2.154Keywords:
indigenous population, power, criminal justice Indian rights, Tucumán colonial periodAbstract
Cordoba’s jurisdiction was a marginal colonial space in which particular technologies of power were implemented from political and judicial bases. These technologies became evermore strange and were rejected by senior functionaries. It is relevant to analyze in this context one particular aspect of the issue: that related to the practice of interethnic criminal justice as it emerges from seventeenth-century judgments. Of notable interest are strategies of local justice and the impact they had on peoples’s lives, reflecting state power and social structure. Indian rights were complex and varied affair. Close examination of normative options reveals details of juridical strategies operating within locally specific historical and social situations.
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