Abstract

This article is part of an attempt to establish some connections between the current territorial reconfiguration processes that arise in the Colombian Pacific in key of the ethnic-territorial recognition has meant - among other things - the collective titling of land for some groups of ‘black communities’ in response to the provisions of Law 70 of 1993; and the logic under which the fourth continent was articulated and represented from the beginning of the colony, especially the moments that occurred with the arrival of black people, in a network of hierarchies and social and regional tensions.

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