The work of Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto is both
influential and controversial. His 2000 bestseller
The Mystery of Capital
posits
that to solve poverty in the developing world, the poor need to transition from
the extralegal sector to the official economy through formal property rights
and incorporated businesses. In 2009, following the 2009 bloody clashes of
indigenous peoples and law enforcement agents in the Peruvian Amazon, De
Soto suggested the extrapolation of
The Mystery of Capital
to the Amazon as a
solution for their underdevelopment. He contended that the Amazon natives
could only progress if granted formal title to land and allowed to create
limited liability corporations. This paper argues, however, that the purported
extrapolation of
The Mystery of Capital
’s propositions is problematic. It aims to show that economic integration of the Amazon natives may further expose
their land resources to appropriation and, in actuality, trigger their cultural,
social and environmental disintegration
Authors: Wieland, Patrick; Thornton, Thomas
Source: Derecho PUCP
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10757/332075
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