| The Open Area
Studies Journal
ISSN: 1874-9143
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[DOI:
10.2174/1874914301104010041]
Institutions and Development: The Role of Elites and Frontier-Type Social
Regulations in Rural Colombia
Lucia Cusmano and Fredy Preciado Pp 41-52
This paper investigates the limitations and opportunities for endogenous development in the underdeveloped
region of the rural Department of Casanare in Colombia. The region is rich in natural resources, but entrapped in its role
of commodity provider for the country's central markets and is deeply affected by social and political exclusion. The paper
argues that the key to sustainable local development lies in the domain of governance and institutions, where the latter
represents both the background conditions and the instruments of the former. Institutional change itself requires governance
mechanisms, which mediate tension, resistance and fracture arising in the local community. The institutional environment
of Casanare is a peripheral space of migration and clashes of elites, where populations that are excluded from the
centre compete for opportunities and resources. This permanent state of confrontation generates conflicts and frequent
changes in institutional forms and rules, so that uncertainty represents a defining character of the local system. The paper
comments on the historical roots of these modes of regulation, analyses the key role of elites and describes the social habits
and informal rules which drive economic behaviour in the traditional farming sectors.
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