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Table of Contents
About The Book
The book centers on an unusual cast of frontier denizens, tackling issues of gender, race, patronage, and colonialism to better understand the competing sources of legitimacy in a newly incorporated area. By the time the national government finally sought to assert its presence more forcefully in the 1930s and 1940s, the population in northern Patagonia had developed its own “pioneer” political culture, built on patronage and informal legal arrangements and reliant on grassroots legitimacy.
Product Details
- Publisher: UNM Press (March 18, 2025)
- Length: 312 pages
- ISBN13: 9780826367518
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Raves and Reviews
“Cikota’s study contributes significantly to our understanding of northern Patagonia in the decades and generations after the Conquest of the Desert. Each chapter shines light on a specific dynamic—such as gender, reputation, and Indigeneity—each critical to understanding the fluid and heterogenous society being formed in the region. As such, Cikota’s study brings complexity and nuance to our understanding of how Argentines sought to ‘civilize’ the ‘desert.’”—Carrie Ryan, editor of The Conquest of the Desert: Argentina’s Indigenous Peoples and the Battle for History
"In the aftermath of the so-called Conquest of the Desert, what was the society and state that emerged in northern Patagonia? Javier Cikota provides a compelling response to this question... Ultimately, Cikota’s contribution is a welcome one. It reminds us that place matters."
– Kyle E. Harvey, The Americas
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Book Cover Image (jpg): Frontier Justice
Trade Paperback 9780826367518












