Bolivia

Bolivia
Bolivian, adj., n.
/beuh liv"ee euh, boh-/; Sp. /baw lee"vyah/, n.
1. a republic in W South America. 7,669,868; 404,388 sq. mi. (1,047,370 sq. km). Caps.: La Paz and Sucre.
2. (often l.c.) a twill fabric made of cut pile with lines either in the warp direction or on the bias.

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Bolivia

Introduction Bolivia
Background: Bolivia, named after independence fighter Simon BOLIVAR, broke away from Spanish rule in 1825; much of its subsequent history has consisted of a series of nearly 200 coups and counter-coups. Comparatively democratic civilian rule was established in the 1980s, but leaders have faced difficult problems of deep-seated poverty, social unrest, and drug production. Current goals include attracting foreign investment, strengthening the educational system, continuing the privatization program, and waging an anticorruption campaign. Geography Bolivia -
Location: Central South America, southwest of Brazil
Geographic coordinates: 17 00 S, 65 00 W
Map references: South America
Area: total: 1,098,580 sq km water: 14,190 sq km land: 1,084,390 sq km
Area - comparative: slightly less than three times the size of Montana
Land boundaries: total: 6,743 km border countries: Argentina 832 km, Brazil 3,400 km, Chile 861 km, Paraguay 750 km, Peru 900 km
Coastline: 0 km (landlocked)
Maritime claims: none (landlocked)
Climate: varies with altitude; humid and tropical to cold and semiarid
Terrain: rugged Andes Mountains with a highland plateau (Altiplano), hills, lowland plains of the Amazon Basin
Elevation extremes: lowest point: Rio Paraguay 90 m highest point: Nevado Sajama 6,542 m
Natural resources: tin, natural gas, petroleum, zinc, tungsten, antimony, silver, iron, lead, gold, timber, hydropower
Land use: arable land: 1.73% permanent crops: 0.21% other: 98.06% (1998 est.)
Irrigated land: 1,280 sq km (1998 est.)
Natural hazards: flooding in the northeast (March- April) Environment - current issues: the clearing of land for agricultural purposes and the international demand for tropical timber are contributing to deforestation; soil erosion from overgrazing and poor cultivation methods (including slash-and-burn agriculture); desertification; loss of biodiversity; industrial pollution of water supplies used for drinking and irrigation Environment - international party to: Biodiversity, Climate
agreements: Change, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol, Desertification, Endangered Species, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Nuclear Test Ban, Ship Pollution, Tropical Timber 83, Tropical Timber 94, Wetlands signed, but not ratified: Environmental Modification, Marine Dumping, Marine Life Conservation, Ozone Layer Protection
Geography - note: landlocked; shares control of Lago Titicaca, world's highest navigable lake (elevation 3,805 m), with Peru People Bolivia
Population: 8,445,134 (July 2002 est.)
Age structure: 0-14 years: 37.8% (male 1,626,596; female 1,565,124) 15-64 years: 57.7% (male 2,383,852; female 2,491,823) 65 years and over: 4.5% (male 169,583; female 208,156) (2002 est.)
Population growth rate: 1.69% (2002 est.)
Birth rate: 26.41 births/1,000 population (2002 est.)
Death rate: 8.05 deaths/1,000 population (2002 est.)
Net migration rate: -1.42 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2002 est.)
Sex ratio: at birth: 1.05 male(s)/female under 15 years: 1.04 male(s)/female 15-64 years: 0.96 male(s)/female 65 years and over: 0.82 male(s)/ female total population: 0.98 male(s)/ female (2002 est.)
Infant mortality rate: 57.52 deaths/1,000 live births (2002 est.) Life expectancy at birth: total population: 64.42 years female: 67.1 years (2002 est.) male: 61.86 years
Total fertility rate: 3.37 children born/woman (2002 est.) HIV/AIDS - adult prevalence rate: 0.1% (1999 est.) HIV/AIDS - people living with HIV/ 4,200 (1999 est.)
AIDS:
HIV/AIDS - deaths: 380 (1999 est.)
Nationality: noun: Bolivian(s) adjective: Bolivian
Ethnic groups: Quechua 30%, mestizo (mixed white and Amerindian ancestry) 30%, Aymara 25%, white 15%
Religions: Roman Catholic 95%, Protestant (Evangelical Methodist)
Languages: Spanish (official), Quechua (official), Aymara (official)
Literacy: definition: age 15 and over can read and write total population: 83.1% male: 90.5% female: 76% (1995 est.) Government Bolivia
Country name: conventional long form: Republic of Bolivia conventional short form: Bolivia local long form: Republica de Bolivia local short form: Bolivia
Government type: republic
Capital: La Paz (seat of government); Sucre (legal capital and seat of judiciary) Administrative divisions: 9 departments (departamentos, singular - departamento); Chuquisaca, Cochabamba, Beni, La Paz, Oruro, Pando, Potosi, Santa Cruz, Tarija
Independence: 6 August 1825 (from Spain)
National holiday: Independence Day, 6 August (1825)
Constitution: 2 February 1967; revised in August 1994
Legal system: based on Spanish law and Napoleonic Code; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
Suffrage: 18 years of age, universal and compulsory (married); 21 years of age, universal and compulsory (single)
Executive branch: chief of state: President Jorge Fernando QUIROGA Ramirez (since 7 August 2001); Vice President NA; note - the president is both the chief of state and head of government note: Vice President Jorge Fernando QUIROGA Ramirez assumed the presidency upon the resignation in August 2001 of former President Hugo BANZER Suarez for health reasons head of government: President Jorge Fernando QUIROGA Ramirez (since 7 August 2001); Vice President NA; note - the president is both the chief of state and head of government note: Vice President Jorge Fernando QUIROGA Ramirez assumed the presidency upon the resignation in August 2001 of former President Hugo BANZER Suarez for health reasons elections: president and vice president elected on the same ticket by popular vote for five-year terms; election last held 1 June 1997 (next to be held 30 June 2002) election results: Hugo BANZER Suarez elected president; percent of vote - Hugo BANZER Suarez (ADN) 22%; Jaime PAZ Zamora (MIR) 17%, Juan Carlos DURAN (MNR) 18%, Ivo KULJIS (UCS) 16%, Remedios LOZA (CONDEPA) 17%; no candidate received a majority of the popular vote; Hugo BANZER Suarez won a congressional runoff election on 5 August 1997 after forming a "megacoalition" with MIR, UCS, CONDEPA, NFR, and former Christian Democratic Party (PDC); resigned 7 August 2001 and was succeeded by Vice President Jorge Fernando QUIROGA Ramirez who is serving out BANZER's term; QUIROGA will step down in August 2002 when the new president is chosen by Congress, a result of no candidate winning a majority in the 30 June 2002 election cabinet: Cabinet appointed by the president
Legislative branch: bicameral National Congress or Congreso Nacional consists of Chamber of Senators or Camara de Senadores (27 seats; members are directly elected by popular vote to serve five-year terms) and Chamber of Deputies or Camara de Diputados (130 seats; members are directly elected by popular vote to serve five-year terms; note - some members are drawn from party lists, thus not directly elected) election results: Chamber of Senators - percent of vote by party - NA%; seats by party - ADN 11, MIR 7, MNR 4, CONDEPA 3, UCS 2; Chamber of Deputies - percent of vote by party - NA%; seats by party - MNR 26, MIR 24, ADN 20, UCS 20, CONDEPA 19, NFR 11, MBL 5, IU 4, FSB 1 elections: Chamber of Senators and Chamber of Deputies - last held 1 June 1997 (next to be held NA June 2002)
Judicial branch: Supreme Court or Corte Suprema (judges appointed for 10-year terms by National Congress); District Courts (one in each department); provincial and local courts (to try minor cases) Political parties and leaders: Bolivian Socialist Falange or FSB [Otto RICHTER]; Civic Solidarity Union or UCS [Johnny FERNANDEZ]; Conscience of the Fatherland or CONDEPA [Remedios LOZA Alvarado]; Free Bolivia Movement or MBL [Franz BARRIOS]; Movement of the Revolutionary Left or MIR [Jaime PAZ Zamora]; Nationalist Democratic Action or ADN [Jorge Fernando QUIROGA Ramirez]; Nationalist Revolutionary Movement or MNR [Gonzalo SANCHEZ DE LOZADA]; New Republican Force or NFR [Manfred REYES-VILLA]; United Left or IU [Marcos DOMIC] note: the ADN, MIR, and UCS comprise the ruling coalition Political pressure groups and Cocalero Groups; indigenous
leaders: organizations; labor unions; Sole Confederation of Campesino Workers of Bolivia or CSUTCB [Felipe QUISPE] International organization CCC, ECLAC, FAO, G-77, IADB, IAEA,
participation: IBRD, ICAO, ICRM, IDA, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS, ILO, IMF, IMO, Interpol, IOC, IOM, ISO (correspondent), ITU, LAES, LAIA, Mercosur (associate), MONUC, NAM, OAS, OPANAL, OPCW, PCA, RG, UN, UNAMSIL, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNIDO, UNTAET, UPU, WCL, WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WToO, WTrO Diplomatic representation in the US: chief of mission: Ambassador Marlene FERNANDEZ del Granado FAX: [1] (202) 328-3712 consulate(s) general: Miami, New York, and San Francisco telephone: [1] (202) 483-4410 chancery: 3014 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20008 Diplomatic representation from the chief of mission: Ambassador V.
US: Manuel ROCHA embassy: Avenida Arce 2780, San Jorge, La Paz mailing address: P. O. Box 425, La Paz; APO AA 34032 telephone: [591] 243-3812 FAX: [591] (2) 433854
Flag description: three equal horizontal bands of red (top), yellow, and green with the coat of arms centered on the yellow band; similar to the flag of Ghana, which has a large black five-pointed star centered in the yellow band Economy Bolivia -
Economy - overview: Bolivia, long one of the poorest and least developed Latin American countries, has made considerable progress toward the development of a market-oriented economy. Successes under President SANCHEZ DE LOZADA (1993-97) included the signing of a free trade agreement with Mexico and becoming an associate member of the Southern Cone Common Market (Mercosur), as well as the privatization of the state airline, telephone company, railroad, electric power company, and oil company. Growth slowed in 1999, in part due to tight government budget policies, which limited needed appropriations for anti-poverty programs, and the fallout from the Asian financial crisis. In 2000, major civil disturbances in April, and again in September and October, held down overall growth to 2.5%. Bolivia's GDP failed to grow in 2001 due to the global slowdown and laggard domestic activity. Growth is expected to pick up in 2002, but the fiscal deficit and debt burden will remain high.
GDP: purchasing power parity - $21.4 billion (2001 est.)
GDP - real growth rate: 0% (2001 est.)
GDP - per capita: purchasing power parity - $2,600 (2001 est.) GDP - composition by sector: agriculture: 14% industry: 31% services: 55% (2000 est.) Population below poverty line: 70% (1999 est.) Household income or consumption by lowest 10%: 0.5%
percentage share: highest 10%: 45.7% (1997) Distribution of family income - Gini 58.9 (1997)
index: Inflation rate (consumer prices): 2% (2001 est.)
Labor force: 2.5 million Labor force - by occupation: agriculture NA%, industry NA%, services NA%
Unemployment rate: 7.6% (2000) note: widespread underemployment
Budget: revenues: $4 billion expenditures: $4 billion, including capital expenditures of $NA (2002 est.)
Industries: mining, smelting, petroleum, food and beverages, tobacco, handicrafts, clothing Industrial production growth rate: 3.9% (1998) Electricity - production: 3.87 billion kWh (2000) Electricity - production by source: fossil fuel: 48.37% hydro: 50.13% other: 1.5% (2000) nuclear: 0% Electricity - consumption: 3.605 billion kWh (2000)
Electricity - exports: 5 million kWh (2000)
Electricity - imports: 11 million kWh (2000)
Agriculture - products: soybeans, coffee, coca, cotton, corn, sugarcane, rice, potatoes; timber
Exports: $1.2 billion (2001 est.)
Exports - commodities: soybeans, natural gas, zinc, gold, wood
Exports - partners: US 32%, Colombia 18%, UK 15%, Brazil 15%, Peru 6% (2000)
Imports: $1.5 billion (2001 est.)
Imports - commodities: capital goods, raw materials and semi-manufactures, chemicals, petroleum, food
Imports - partners: US 24%, Argentina 17%, Brazil 15%, Chile 9%, Peru 5 (2000)
Debt - external: $5.8 billion (2001 est.) Economic aid - recipient: $588 million (1997)
Currency: boliviano (BOB)
Currency code: BOB
Exchange rates: bolivianos per US dollar - 6.8613 (January 2002), 6.6069 (2001), 6.1835 (2000), 5.8124 (1999), 5.5101 (1998), 5.2543 (1997)
Fiscal year: calendar year Communications Bolivia Telephones - main lines in use: 327,600 (1996) Telephones - mobile cellular: 116,000 (1997)
Telephone system: general assessment: new subscribers face bureaucratic difficulties; most telephones are concentrated in La Paz and other cities; mobile cellular telephone use expanding rapidly domestic: primary trunk system, which is being expanded, employs digital microwave radio relay; some areas are served by fiber-optic cable; mobile cellular systems are being expanded international: satellite earth station - 1 Intelsat (Atlantic Ocean) Radio broadcast stations: AM 171, FM 73, shortwave 77 (1999)
Radios: 5.25 million (1997) Television broadcast stations: 48 (1997)
Televisions: 900,000 (1997)
Internet country code: .bo Internet Service Providers (ISPs): 9 (2000)
Internet users: 78,000 (2000) Transportation Bolivia
Railways: total: 3,691 km narrow gauge: 3,652 km 1.000- m gauge; 39 km 0.760-m gauge (13 km electrified) (1995 est.)
Highways: total: 49,400 km paved: 2,500 km (including 30 km of expressways) unpaved: 46,900 km (1996)
Waterways: 10,000 km (commercially navigable)
Pipelines: crude oil 1,800 km; petroleum products 580 km; natural gas 1,495 km
Ports and harbors: Puerto Aguirre (on the Paraguay/ Parana waterway, at the Bolivia/ Brazil border); also, Bolivia has free port privileges in maritime ports in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Paraguay
Merchant marine: total: 36 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 196,399 GRT/320,137 DWT ships by type: bulk 3, cargo 15, chemical tanker 2, container 1, petroleum tanker 13, roll on/roll off 2 note: includes some foreign-owned ships registered here as a flag of Belize 2, China 2, Cuba 1, Cyprus 1, Egypt 1, Honduras 1, Latvia 2, Liberia 2, Panama 1, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 1, Saudi Arabia 1, Singapore 1, South Korea 3, Switzerland 1, Ukraine 1, United Arab Emirates 5, United States 1 (2002 est.)
Airports: 1,109 (2001) Airports - with paved runways: total: 13 over 3,047 m: 4 2,438 to 3,047 m: 3 1,524 to 2,437 m: 4 914 to 1,523 m: 2 (2001) Airports - with unpaved runways: total: 1,096 over 3,047 m: 1 2,438 to 3,047 m: 4 1,524 to 2,437 m: 65 914 to 1,523 m: 236 under 914 m: 790 (2001) Military Bolivia
Military branches: Army (Ejercito Boliviano), Navy (Fuerza Naval, includes Marines), Air Force (Fuerza Aerea Boliviana), National Police Force (Policia Nacional de Bolivia) Military manpower - military age: 19 years of age (2002 est.) Military manpower - availability: males age 15-49: 2,062,321 (2002 est.) Military manpower - fit for military males age 15-49: 1,343,755 (2002
service: est.) Military manpower - reaching males: 90,120 (2002 est.)
military age annually: Military expenditures - dollar $147 million (FY99)
figure: Military expenditures - percent of 1.8% (FY99)
GDP: Transnational Issues Bolivia Disputes - international: continues to demand a sovereign corridor to the South Pacific Ocean since the Atacama region was lost to Chile in 1884
Illicit drugs: world's third-largest cultivator of coca (after Colombia and Peru) with an estimated 19,900 hectares under cultivation in July 2001, stable from July 2000 levels; intermediate coca products and cocaine exported to or through Colombia, Brazil, Argentina, and Chile to the US and other international drug markets; eradication and alternative crop programs under the QUIROGA administration has kept pace with farmers' attempts to increase cultivation after significant reductions in 1998 and 1999

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officially Republic of Bolivia

Country, western South America.

Area: 424,164 sq mi (1,098,581 sq km). Population (2002 est.): 8,401,000. Capitals: La Paz (administrative), Sucre (judicial). The population consists of three principal groups: Indians, largely Aymara and the Quechua; Indian-Spanish mestizos; and descendants of the Spanish. Languages: Spanish, Aymara, Quechua (all official). Religions: Roman Catholicism (official), vestiges of pre-Columbian religion. Currency: boliviano. Bolivia may be divided into three major regions. The southwestern highlands, or Altiplano, where Lake Titicaca is located, extends through southwestern Bolivia. It is enclosed by the second region, the western and eastern branches of the Andes Mountains. Much of the eastern branch is heavily forested terrain, with many deep river valleys; the western branch is a high plateau bordered by volcanoes, including the country's highest peak, Mount Sajama, which rises to 21,463 ft (6,542 m). The third region is a lowland area that comprises the northern and eastern two-thirds of the country; its rivers include the Guaporé, Mamoré, Beni, and upper Pilcomayo. Bolivia has a developing mixed economy based on the production of natural gas and agricultural foodstuffs. It is a republic with two legislative houses; its head of state and government is the president. The Bolivian highlands were the location of the advanced Tiwanaku culture in the 7th–11th centuries and, with its passing, became the home of the Aymara, an Indian group conquered by the Inca in the 15th century. The Inca were overrun by the invading Spanish conquistadores under Francisco Pizarro in the 1530s. By 1600 Spain had established the cities of Charcas (now Sucre), La Paz, Santa Cruz, and what would become Cochabamba and had begun to exploit the silver wealth of Potosí. Bolivia flourished in the 17th century, and for a time Potosí was the largest city in the Americas. By the end of the century, the mineral wealth had been depleted. Talk of independence began as early as 1809, but not until 1825 were Spanish forces finally defeated. Bolivia shrank in size when it lost Atacama province to Chile in 1884 at the end of the War of the Pacific and again in 1939 when it lost most of Gran Chaco to Paraguay. One of South America's poorest countries, Bolivia was plagued by governmental instability for much of the 20th century. By the 1990s it had become one of the world's largest producers of coca, from which the narcotic cocaine is derived. The government subsequently instituted a largely successful program to eradicate the crop, although such efforts were resisted by the many poor farmers who depended on the income derived from coca production.

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▪ 2009

Area:
1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)
Population
(2008 est.): 9,694,000
Capitals:
La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)
Head of state and government:
President Evo Morales Ayma

       Violent clashes over constitutional reform erupted in September 2008 as ethnic and regional divisions hardened to the point where some observers believed that they were threatening Bolivia's survival as a country. The conflict began after Pres. Evo Morales easily survived a recall referendum in August. Morales, one of a new generation of Latin American leaders seeking to remold political institutions and curb the power of traditional elites, won 67% of the vote—substantially higher than the 53.7% he obtained in the 2005 presidential election. Then, declaring that the vote had confirmed support for his nationalization policies, he said that he would submit a new constitution and land-reform measures to a popular vote early in 2009.

      This announcement outraged Morales's opponents in the ranching and natural-gas-producing eastern lowlands. They were led by provincial governors who demanded a greater share of gas-export profits for their provinces and opposed Morales's determination to spend gas tax revenue on financial assistance for the elderly. The governors' mandates had been reconfirmed by wide margins in the referendum, and voters in four provinces had approved proposals for greater provincial autonomy.

      On September 10, anti-Morales protesters seized a gas field and caused a leak and explosion in a key export pipeline. The next day at least 18 people died in clashes between pro- and antigovernment groups in Cobija, the capital of Pando. Government officials and witnesses said that most of the victims were pro-Morales farmers who were attacked by opposition gunmen as they sought to reclaim national government offices that had been ransacked by the president's opponents. Morales accused the U.S. of conspiring with the eastern governors in an effort to destabilize Bolivia, an allegation that the U.S. denied. In September, after violent protests broke out at gas facilities in the eastern provinces, Morales ordered U.S. Ambassador Philip Goldberg to leave the country. In return, the U.S. declared Bolivian Ambassador Gustavo Guzman persona non grata.

      Morales had nationalized most of the petroleum industry in 2006 and, at a time of high world energy prices, remained determined to distribute export revenues widely among Bolivians. The resulting stimulus led Bolivia's GDP in the first quarter of 2008 to grow by 6% over the same period in 2007. Strong domestic demand for energy coupled with investment shortfalls led Bolivia to warn early in the year that it would not be able to meet export commitments to its South American neighbours. In July the government launched an exploration effort to increase gas reserves by 20% with the help of a drilling rig and $888 million in investment from Venezuela. The economic horizon clouded when the U.S. hinted strongly that it would suspend Bolivia's access to the trade privileges given to Andean countries.

      There was further discord in the battle against the illegal cocaine trade. In November Morales ordered the suspension of activities by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. The government announced that it would take over the distribution of U.S. antinarcotics funds. Vice Minister of Social Defense Felipe Cáceres, who like Morales owned a coca plot, said that Bolivia remained committed to fighting cocaine production and trafficking but also to maintaining the traditional market for coca leaf, which was used to relieve hunger pangs and altitude sickness. Despite the tensions, Bolivia continued to rely on U.S. military aid for its antidrug army units.

Paul Knox

▪ 2008

Area:
1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)
Population
(2007 est.): 9,525,000
Capitals:
La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)
Head of state and government:
President Evo Morales Ayma

 Pres. Evo Morales forged ahead in 2007 with his bold attempt to restructure Bolivia on terms more favourable to its impoverished Indian majority. He scored some successes, significantly boosting the government's share of revenue from natural gas and mineral resources. The constituent assembly drafting a new constitution made little progress, however, and tension increased between the Indian-dominated western highlands and the resource-rich eastern lowlands. The rivalry between the regions was further aggravated by a proposal to transfer the political capital back to Sucre (the sole capital until 1899), sparking massive protests in La Paz.

      As South America's first Indian president, Morales was determined to lock in the political gains represented by his 2005 election. His followers in the assembly pushed for the recognition of Indian nations with extensive political rights and control over resources. Morales's opponents said that such conditions could lead to the breakup of the country and sought priority for regional governments to reinforce the power of non-Indian elites. Agreement proved difficult, and the assembly's yearlong mandate, scheduled to expire in August, was renewed for four months with the possibility of further extensions.

      Repercussions from the 2006 nationalization of the gas industry dominated the economic scene. In May, after tense negotiations, Brazil's state-owned petroleum company agreed to sell back two oil refineries it had bought from Bolivia in 1999. Brazil was Bolivia's major gas customer, and the refinery dispute highlighted Bolivia's role in the wider struggle between the United States, Brazil, and Venezuela for regional influence. Venezuelan Pres. Hugo Chávez provided aid pledges of $800 million for the year. The Morales government pushed ahead with other nationalization plans, opening negotiations with the Italian majority owners of the telephone system and signaling a similar move with the electrical utility. It also moved to capitalize on world metals by raising its share of mineral royalties.

      Despite the tension in several sectors, high commodity prices and the absence of crippling foreign-debt payments allowed Bolivia to register a measure of economic growth. Morales's Zero Malnutrition program, which aimed to wipe out a scourge affecting 40% of the population, was praised by the UN's special rapporteur on the right to food. The personal popularity of Morales remained strong, although he was criticized for doling out aid from Chávez as personal favours to allies. Cocalero, a documentary film about Morales's life, was favourably received outside Bolivia and added lustre to his image.

      Protests mounted in Bolivia after world football (soccer) officials banned international matches in stadiums more than 2,500 m (8,200 ft) above sea level, citing possible threats to players' health. The Bolivian campaign included well-publicized trips by Morales to play football on alpine fields, and the ban was eventually modified to allow matches to be played at the stadium in La Paz (about 3,600 m [11,800 ft]). Meanwhile, scientists warned that global warming was steadily reducing the size of Andean glaciers, endangering water supplies for about two million Bolivians and threatening the existence of the Chacaltaya alpine resort, which boasted the highest ski run on Earth, at 5,300 m (17,400 ft).

Paul Knox

▪ 2007

Area:
1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)
Population
(2006 est.): 9,354,000
Capitals:
La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)
Head of state and government:
Presidents Eduardo Rodríguez Veltzé and, from January 22, Evo Morales Ayma

 The historic nationalization of Bolivia's lucrative natural-gas industry and the convening of a citizens' constitutional assembly were the landmark events of 2006. Both were initiatives of Pres. Evo Morales (Morales, Evo ) (see Biographies), a former coca farmer who took office in January after having placed first in the December 2005 election. Morales, of Aymara heritage, became Bolivia's first Indian president after having spent years as a leader of protests by labour, peasant, civic, and indigenous movements that drove two previous presidents from office. He promised to reclaim Bolivian resources from foreign control and give the three-fifths of Bolivians who identified as Indians a stronger voice in national affairs.

      The nationalization, announced by Morales on May 1, required local units of foreign oil-and-gas firms to transfer majority control to Bolivia's state-owned petroleum company, Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales Bolivianos (YPFB). Defending his decision, Morales said, “For more than 500 years our resources have been pillaged. This has to end now.” Later, however, it became clear that it was one thing to issue a decree and another to put it into practice. Morales had said there would be no compensation for the foreign firms, but it appeared that the firms were able to block the transfer of assets until at least some money changed hands. Hampered by a lack of funds, YPFB missed deadlines for assuming control of Spanish and Brazilian petroleum interests. Its president, Jorge Alvarado, resigned on August 28 amid allegations of corruption and mismanagement.

      Morales moved in other ways to change the character of government, traditionally dominated by white and mixed-race elites. As justice minister he chose Casimira Rodríguez, a Quechua Indian, former housemaid, and leader of a domestic workers' union. As ambassador to the U.S. he nominated a journalist, Gustavo Guzmán, who had no diplomatic or foreign experience. Convening the constituent assembly in August, Morales described its 255 members as “soldiers for our country's true independence.” They were given 12 months to draft a constitution, which would then be submitted to a referendum. State control over natural resources, religious and language rights, and judicial reform were listed as priorities by Morales and his supporters. They did not fare as well as they had hoped, however, in July elections for the assembly. Businessmen and landowners in the prosperous southeast worked to enshrine property rights and regional autonomy in the new charter. In November Morales signed into law a land-reform bill that gave the government the right to claim some types of privately owned land and reappropriate it to indigent farmers.

      Some South American governments were sympathetic to Morales's attempts to address long-standing inequalities. Argentina took the nationalization in stride and renegotiated a gas-supply agreement with a 47% price increase. Nationalization inflamed relations with Brazil, the purchaser of two-thirds of Bolivia's gas exports and a major investor in Bolivia. Illegal settlement of Bolivian territory by Brazilian landowners added to the friction, but Brazilian Pres. Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva appeared eager to maintain good relations with Morales. Relations with the United States were strained by Morales's close links with Venezuelan Pres. Hugo Chávez and by the revelation that U.S. officials and the Bolivian armed forces had jointly removed 28 antiaircraft missiles from Bolivian territory shortly before Morales's inauguration.

Paul Knox

▪ 2006

Area:
1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)
Population
(2005 est.): 8,858,000
Capitals:
La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)
Head of state and government:
Presidents Carlos Mesa Gisbert and, from June 9, Eduardo Rodríguez Veltzé

      Saying Bolivia was “on the verge of civil war,” Pres. Carlos Mesa submitted his resignation on June 6, 2005. It was accepted by Congress three days later and marked the third time in less than four years that a Bolivian president had left office before completing his term. Mesa was forced from his post by massive protests and road blockades mounted by leaders of Bolivia's poor Indian majority. The chief justice of the Supreme Court, Eduardo Rodríguez Veltzé, was installed as caretaker president with a mandate to call early elections. The fall of Mesa's government underscored the deep ethnic, regional, and socioeconomic divisions in South America's poorest country and the persistent failure of its political system to deal with them.

      The issue at the root of the protests was the management of Bolivia's huge natural gas reserves. For several years leftist and indigenous movements had demanded sharp increases in taxes on gas firms and a halt to exports. Bloody street clashes drove Pres. Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada from office in 2003, and he was succeeded by Mesa, his vice president and a former television personality. The protests were rekindled in 2005 as Congress considered and eventually voted for a sharp increase in taxes on gas production. At the same time, a backlash against the Indian movements gathered steam in the gas-rich eastern lowlands, where many believed the political turmoil was slowing investment and robbing them of an energy bonanza.

      Over Mesa's objection the gas-tax measure became law in May, which led energy firms to scale back exploration and development. The protests intensified, with demands now including nationalization of the gas industry, and Mesa promised before resigning to convene a constitutional assembly to redistribute political power in the Indians' favour. Earlier, in response to the lowland protests, he had agreed to allow states to elect their governors instead of having them appointed by the central government.

      The protests abated once Rodríguez was installed. Soaring world energy prices gave hope that Bolivian gas revenue might finally be used to alleviate the country's crushing poverty. Bolivia's wealthier neighbours, whose industries depended on a steady supply of gas, invited it to join a South American pipeline network. Meanwhile, the jockeying to succeed Rodríguez got under way. The front-runners were socialist Evo Morales, a key protest leader who had placed second in the 2002 presidential election, and Jorge Quiroga, a former vice president who had served out the term of ailing Pres. Hugo Bánzer after he stepped down in 2001. Quiroga accused Morales of being under the influence of Venezuelan Pres. Hugo Chávez (Chavez, Hugo ) (see Biographies), while Morales denounced Quiroga as a puppet of the United States. In the December 18 election, Morales won an absolute majority. Scheduled to take office in early 2006, he would be the country's first Indian president.

      The furor over natural gas overshadowed developments in the coca trade. The United Nations reported sharp increases in production of cocaine and in the area devoted to growing coca leaf, the drug's chief ingredient. The Bolivian government scaled back U.S.-supported eradication campaigns.

Paul Knox

▪ 2005

Area:
1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)
Population
(2004 est.): 8,724,000
Capitals:
La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)
Head of state and government:
President Carlos Mesa Gisbert

      The temperature of public life in Bolivia cooled somewhat in 2004 following the tumultuous events of the previous year. Pres. Carlos Mesa Gisbert, who had taken office after a popular revolt over natural-gas exports drove out his predecessor, made good his promise to submit energy policy to the people. After voters backed him in a referendum on July 18, Mesa forged ahead with legislation to strengthen state control over the gas resource. Mesa was hampered, however, by his lack of a base in Congress, and it remained unclear when Bolivians would begin to enjoy substantial benefits from the country's vast gas reserves.

      Mesa submitted five initiatives to the electorate: scrapping the current energy law, affirming state ownership of oil and gas reserves, returning privatized stock to the state petroleum company, using gas as a bargaining chip in Bolivia's long-running dispute with Chile over access to the Pacific Ocean, and allowing gas exports under certain conditions. The conditions included meeting national demand first, raising taxes and royalties to 50% of production revenue, creating a domestic gas industry, and dedicating revenues to social spending. All five questions passed, and although they were ambiguous, the results were interpreted as a political victory for the president. The first bill introduced by Mesa to implement his new mandate was rejected by Congress as too weak. The revised version provided for renegotiation of contracts with foreign companies, which led to warnings that it would frighten away investors. Nevertheless, Mesa sought to increase gas exports to Bolivia's neighbours. He signed a deal with Peru and said he preferred to see liquefied Bolivian gas exported through Peru rather than Chile.

      Indians and non-Indians appeared increasingly at odds. Mesa received a degree of support from powerful peasant leader Evo Morales Ayma, who approved the idea of the referendum while advocating rejection of some questions. Felipe Quispe Huanca, Morales's rival, called for a boycott of the vote. Quispe resigned from Congress in June, saying he would pursue the “revolutionary struggle” to establish an independent Aymara Indian state. The mayor of Ayo Ayo, 90 km (55 mi) south of La Paz, was assassinated by townspeople who accused him of corruption. Such developments—along with Mesa's leftward shift on energy policy—encouraged talk of secession in prosperous southeastern Bolivia, where the natural gas fields are located and where many found the concerns of highland Indians remote. In addition, in local elections in December, Indian and peasant organizations trounced traditional parties in every major Bolivian city.

      The growing of coca leaf, the raw material for cocaine, continued to be a source of tension. Drug prosecutor Monica von Borries was assassinated in a car-bomb attack in March. The UN reported that coca production had declined over the previous decade but also that illegal plantings covered nearly as much acreage as legal ones, despite eradication efforts. The plight of Bolivia's impoverished tin miners was highlighted in March when a laid-off miner excluded from retirement benefits blew himself up inside the Congress chamber. Several thousand former miners were later monthly granted pensions of $60.

Paul Knox

▪ 2004

Area:
1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)
Population
(2003 est.): 8,586,000
Capitals:
La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)
Head of state and government:
Presidents Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada and, from October 17, Carlos Mesa Gisbert

      The worst social unrest in more than two decades forced Bolivian Pres. Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada to step down on Oct. 17, 2003, after having served less than 15 months in office. His governing coalition collapsed after a month of clashes between mainly Indian protesters and the security forces, in which more than 70 people were killed. Without majority support in Congress, Sánchez de Lozada resigned and boarded a plane for Miami, Fla. Vice Pres. Carlos Mesa Gisbert, a 50-year-old historian and television journalist with little political experience, was sworn in as president.

      Various grievances underlay the protests, but the main cause was Sánchez de Lozada's advocacy of the Pacific LNG (liquefied natural gas) project, led by a consortium of foreign-owned companies that planned to liquefy natural gas from Bolivia's vast reserves and export it to Mexico and the U.S. The president had hoped that LNG revenues would help overhaul the education system and lower the poverty rate. His opponents denounced the project as a sellout, saying Bolivians would not benefit from it. Nationalist sentiment was also aroused, because Pacific LNG promoters wanted to export the gas through Chile, whose conquest of Bolivia's Pacific coast in 1879 had left a legacy of bitterness.

      The protesters focused their anger on Sánchez de Lozada, a wealthy mining magnate whose years of living in the U.S. had left him speaking Spanish with an American accent. In February he had been forced to vacate the presidential palace in La Paz briefly after bullets were fired into the building during a gun battle between soldiers and striking policemen. Protests had erupted over a government income tax proposal aimed at reducing the fiscal deficit—a key demand of the International Monetary Fund in return for a $4 billion loan package. Elite police units in La Paz took advantage of the protests to walk off the job in support of demands for a wage increase. Their absence encouraged looters, and soldiers were deployed to restore order. At least 29 people died in the violence.

      The upheavals highlighted the growing political importance of Aymara- and Quechua-speaking Indians, who made up two-thirds of Bolivia's population. In a speech to business leaders in November, President Mesa said, “For the first time the Quechua and Aymara world is thinking for itself.” He appointed a nonpartisan cabinet that included a minister of indigenous affairs. Coca farmers' leader Evo Morales Ayma said that he would give Mesa some breathing room, and Mesa said that he would consider making changes to the highly unpopular U.S.-backed campaign to eradicate illegal coca-leaf plantations. Another powerful Indian leader, Felipe Quispe Huanca, said he was suspicious of the new president, however.

      Mesa warned that all Bolivians would have to make further sacrifices if the country was to avoid disaster. He promised to hold a referendum on the Pacific LNG project and to convene a constituent assembly to consider reforms to natural-resources laws. Nevertheless, some industry observers believed that Bolivia had missed its chance to crack the offshore natural-gas market as projects to ship gas from more stable countries forged ahead.

Paul Knox

▪ 2003

Area:
1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)
Population
(2002 est.): 8,401,000
Capitals:
La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)
Head of state and government:
Presidents Jorge Quiroga Ramírez and, from August 6, Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada

      The social unrest that had been brewing in Bolivia for several years left its imprint on the June 2002 elections, in which Evo Morales Ayma, leader of the union representing growers of illegal coca crops, staged a surprising second-place finish. Morales drew support from voters disillusioned with the failure of market-oriented economic policies to ease the poverty afflicting more than 60% of Bolivians and with the continuing influence of the U.S. in Bolivian affairs. Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada, a mining magnate and former president, claimed 22.4% of the vote against 20.9% for Morales. The Bolivian Congress, which chooses the president if no candidate wins a majority, picked Sánchez de Lozada after he unexpectedly reached a coalition agreement with former president Jaime Paz Zamora. The new cabinet included seven ministers from Paz Zamora's Movement of the Revolutionary Left. Acknowledging the appeal of Morales and other rival candidates, Sánchez de Lozada promised a “social pact to get Bolivia out of this terrible economic crisis.” He pledged to double public investment and to improve public education with profits from Pacific LNG, a huge project to export natural gas to Mexico and the U.S.

      Controversy continued over the U.S.-supported program to eradicate coca plantations. Clashes involving coca growers, police, and soldiers claimed 14 lives between August 2001 and March 2002, and an elite U.S.-financed Bolivian army unit supporting eradication efforts was accused of committing human rights abuses. During the presidential campaign Morales called for the expulsion of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents from Bolivia. U.S. Ambassador Manuel Rocha then warned that U.S. aid would be threatened if “those who want Bolivia again to be a cocaine exporter” were elected. His statement led leading candidates to protest against interference in Bolivian affairs.

      In the Chapare coca-growing region, where the average income had fallen by two-thirds since 1998, about 20,000 farmers were receiving international aid. The eradication campaign was accompanied by incentives to switch to bananas, black pepper, and palm hearts, but farmers complained that the alternative crops were far harder than coca to grow and market. Sánchez de Lozada and Morales held meetings in September to explore solutions to the coca problem, but Interior Minister Alberto Gasser Vargas said the eradication program was not negotiable.

      The Pacific LNG project revived landlocked Bolivia's dream of recovering permanent access to the sea, which it had lost to Chile in the 19th century. Bolivian gas was to be piped to a Pacific Ocean port and liquefied there for export. The government faced a choice between port sites in Chile and Peru. The British-Spanish-American consortium promoting the scheme said the cheapest route lay through Chile, but support for a Peruvian port grew stronger after the Peruvian government offered a renewable 99-year lease on a coastal site where Bolivia could enforce its own laws and tax regimes. There were reports that Chile and Bolivia were discussing a similar proposal.

Paul Knox

▪ 2002

Area:
1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)
Population
(2001 est.): 8,516,000
Capitals:
La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)
Head of state and government:
Presidents Hugo Bánzer Suárez and, from August 7, Jorge Quiroga Ramírez

      In Bolivia the year 2001 was marked by renewed protests over economic and social grievances and by the illness and subsequent resignation of unpopular Pres. Hugo Bánzer Suárez. The 75-year-old Bánzer, a major figure in Bolivian public life for 30 years, was treated in the U.S. for lung and liver cancer and resigned for health reasons on August 6. Vice Pres. Jorge Quiroga Ramírez, a Texas-educated industrial engineer and former IBM executive, was sworn in as president the next day. Quiroga, aged 41 and considered a moderate in Bánzer's conservative National Democratic Action party, said he represented a new generation in Bolivian politics. He named 12 new cabinet ministers and kept only 4 from Bánzer's team.

      Opposition leader Felipe Quispe Huanca organized protests against Bánzer's market-oriented economic policies. Quispe's supporters included street vendors in La Paz as well as teachers, health workers, trade unionists, and growers of coca, the raw material for cocaine. Most of the illegal coca crop had been forcibly eradicated in a U.S.-supported campaign, and farmers said they feared starvation as a result. The protests, which also included road blockades, were hampered by conflicts among the organizers. A truce was reached in August, and the government agreed to talks on land reform and other social issues. The protests indicated deep discontent with policies that attracted foreign investment but provided few jobs and little relief from economic hardship. The International Monetary Fund acknowledged that despite 15 years of adjustment programs under its supervision, nearly two-thirds of Bolivians lived in poverty.

      Bánzer's political troubles continued after he stepped down. His former defense minister accused him of corruption, charging that Bánzer had inflated the amount paid for a government aircraft, and human rights campaigners threatened to prosecute him for abuses committed during his military dictatorship in the 1970s. Meanwhile, Bolivia pushed ahead with judicial reform, and the first “citizen judges” appointed under a new criminal procedure code began hearing cases in September.

      Quiroga hoped revenues from natural gas exports would replace economic losses from coca eradication and a crackdown on smuggling. Gas exports in the first six months of the year rose by 151% over 2000, but demand in Brazil, Bolivia's major customer, was lower than expected because of economic and regulatory difficulties there. Finance Minister Jacques Trigo Loubiere said in September that the economy would register no growth during 2001. Quiroga and gas producers promoted a scheme in which liquefied Bolivian gas would be exported to Mexico, converted back to gas, and piped to the energy-hungry U.S. Quiroga also hoped to further capitalize on Bolivia's vast gas fields by producing petrochemicals and issuing bonds backed by future exports.

Paul Knox

▪ 2001

Area:
1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)
Population
(2000 est.): 8,328,700
Capitals:
La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)
Head of state and government:
President Hugo Bánzer Suárez

      Bolivian Pres. Hugo Bánzer Suárez faced the severest test of his five-year term when unrest over the privatization of water services in Cochabamba, the nation's third largest city, erupted into a nationwide protest in April 2000. The government had turned over the deteriorating water system to the Aguas del Tunari consortium, which included British, American, Italian, Spanish, and Bolivian interests. After water rates were increased to pay for improvements, mass demonstrations paralyzed Cochabamba. Farmers angered by a new law regulating the use of wells joined the protests, followed by teachers and other labour unionists. Roads were blocked in much of the country. Police in La Paz and Santa Cruz de la Sierra mutinied and were quickly granted pay increases.

      Bánzer declared a state of emergency on April 8. At least five people, including an army captain, were killed in clashes between protesters and security forces. Coca growers joined the protest to demand an end to the forcible eradication of illegal plantations. The government agreed to halt the Aguas del Tunari project, revise the well law, and release arrested demonstrators. The state of emergency was lifted on April 20. Five days later Bánzer replaced his finance and defense ministers.

      The government continued its war on the illegal drug trade. Eradication and crop-substitution schemes reduced the area planted in coca, the raw material for cocaine. Some farmers accepted incentives to switch to bananas, palm hearts, and other crops, but others refused and denounced plans for a U.S-supported military base in the Chaparé region. Protests by farmers and teachers in September and October again forced Bánzer to rescind government initiatives. Minister of Foreign Affairs Javier Murillo de la Rocha said crop eradication had shrunk the economy by $500 million. In March Bánzer announced an emergency plan to deal with the impact of crop eradication, widespread flooding, and slumping commodity prices. The plan included a $500 million loan fund for farmers and manufacturers, a separate loan scheme to finance low-income housing, and the elimination of a tax on imported capital goods.

      Exports from January to July totaled $699 million, up 14% over the same period in 1999. Natural gas, soybeans, zinc, and silver accounted for most of the increase. The government continued to pin its hopes for economic revival on gas exports, and Bánzer announced in March that Bolivia's estimated natural gas reserves had doubled. The Bolivia-Brazil gas pipeline was extended to Pôrto Alegre, Braz., and connections to more Bolivian gas fields were planned.

Paul Knox

▪ 2000

Area:
1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)
Population:
(1999 est.): 8,137,000
Capitals:
La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)
Head of state and government:
President Hugo Bánzer Suárez

      In 1999 Bolivia continued to promote economic development and antidrug efforts, but not without controversy. On February 9 the Bolivian and Brazilian presidents inaugurated a 3,069-km (4,938-mi) pipeline from the natural gas fields of Bolivia to southeastern Brazil; a 20-year supply contract was also made. The discovery of another major gas field was later announced, and a $200 million foreign loan was approved on June 15 for the building of a branch pipeline to Cuiabá, Braz.

      Bolivians continued to question their military's past actions during the shadowy antiterrorist campaign known as Operation Condor in the 1970s. In 1999 some legislators pushed to send relevant documents to Spain for use in the attempt to extradite former Chilean leader Gen. Augusto Pinochet Ugarte; however, many legislators—even some within the Nationalist Revolutionary Movement—opposed the document transfer, because they feared negative publicity for Bolivia as well as possible allegations against Pres. Hugo Bánzer, who had held dictatorial powers in the 1970s. The Spanish judge in the Pinochet case, Baltasar Garzón, had already implicated the Bolivian military in the kidnapping of seven Bolivians who had been interrogated and executed in Chile during Pinochet's rule.

      Bolivia's blitzkrieg on drugs gained momentum. As much as 25% of the coca crop in Bolivia's Chapare region may have been eliminated, including crops in areas of Carrasco National Park. Bánzer's narcotics war, called the Dignity Plan, promoted alternative crops yet forced the eradication of coca fields. These efforts had also been connected with state corruption, and in March the government suspended 18 local judges pending investigations of collusion with drug traffickers; also that month, Bánzer stated that all government officials would undergo drug testing and those testing positive would be removed. Notable resistance to the Dignity Plan came from Chapare congressman Evo Morales, who was elected in 1998 under the slogan “Vote for coca!”

      There was continuing growth in key industries, particularly fossil fuels and agriculture (notably soybeans) in eastern Bolivia. Another prospect was the construction of a paved road from La Paz to the Peruvian port city of Ilo, which was undertaken to reduce dependency on Chilean ports. The government finalized more privatizations, including that of the once-formidable hydrocarbon monopoly Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales Bolivianos, as its last units were divided up and sold off. International lenders and donors lauded Bolivia's fiscal progress in June, and in October the International Monetary Fund gave its seal of approval. It was also announced that the next phase of Bolivia's development plan would do more to benefit the poor.

      In June the nation was shaken by scandal with the arrest of a group of drug traffickers that included Bánzer family member Marco Marino Diodato; the arrests were made following an investigation by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, which had been allowed considerable leeway to operate within Bolivia. Bánzer replaced nine members of his Cabinet that same month, mainly with members of his own conservative Nationalist Democratic Action.

Stephen P. Davis

▪ 1999

      Area: 1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)

      Population (1998 est.): 7,957,000

      Capitals: La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)

      Head of state and government: President Hugo Bánzer Suárez

      Interparty bickering and new corruption scandals marked the first year of Bolivia's new coalition government in 1998. The former mayor of La Paz, Gaby Candia (ousted in January and replaced by Germán Monroy), was accused of having spent $1.6 million of public funds on improper land dealings; the accusation was seen by many, however, as a move to undermine the opposition Nationalist Revolutionary Movement. Meanwhile, Conscience of the Fatherland, the junior member of the governing coalition, was unhappy with the government's commitment to privatization and reduced public spending. Its attempt to reconcile its populist principles with the policies of the new government caused ruptures within the party, with some members calling for a complete withdrawal from the coalition.

      Bono Solidario, or Bonosol, the public pension system set up by the previous government, was scrapped during the year owing to lack of funds. A new scheme, Bolivida, was introduced in June. It would provide a minimum annual payment of $90 upon retirement to those who were aged 50 or older on Dec. 1, 1995. Funding would come from 30% of the Collective Capitalization Fund, which contained the proceeds of the previous government's capitalization program, estimated at $1.5 billion. The government planned to use the remaining two-thirds of the fund to finance a new scheme that would provide individual share funds, estimated at $400 apiece, for all those aged between 21 and 50 on Dec. 1, 1995. Beneficiaries would be able to cash in their shares when they reached 65.

      The devastating effects of the previous year's El Niño on crops, land, homes, and health continued to leave their mark on the country. The most severely affected regions were Oruro, Potosí, and Chuquisaca. Government estimates revealed that more than 40% of the population of those provinces needed emergency help. El Niño caused agricultural output to fall by 3.9% during the first half of 1998. Crops farmed in the western highlands, among them corn, potatoes, cotton, and wheat, were the worst hit. Only soybeans, Bolivia's highest export earner, survived the adverse weather conditions, with just a 0.1% decline in the harvest.

      The government continued to have difficulty persuading coca growers in the Chapare region to cooperate in its antinarcotics program. The growers claimed that the government's alternative crop-development proposals were insufficient compensation for eradicating their coca crops. Protests came to a head in June; clashes between coca growers and security forces resulted in more than 10 deaths. The leader of the coca growers, Evo Morales, called for former president Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada to be brought to trial for human rights abuses committed by the previous government in the Chapare region.

ALAN MURPHY

▪ 1998

      Area: 1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi)

      Population (1997 est.): 7,767,000

      Capitals: La Paz (administrative) and Sucre (judicial)

      Head of state and government: Presidents Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada Bustamente and, from August 6, Hugo Bánzer Suárez

      In the June 1997 election, a former dictator of Bolivia, Hugo Bánzer Suárez, and his party, Nationalist Democratic Action, emerged as winners. They secured 22% of the vote and became the dominant party in a new government coalition with the Movement of the Revolutionary Left (MIR), Civic Solidarity Union, and Conscience of the Fatherland. This coalition gave Bánzer a broad basis from which to govern, with a large majority of seats in the legislature.

      The election campaign was marked by a bitter rivalry between the MIR leader, Jaime Paz Zamora, and the outgoing president, Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada Bustamente, whose party finished second. Sánchez de Lozada focused on the allegations that the MIR had received money from drug traffickers during the 1989 campaign. It was for this alleged reason that Paz Zamora's U.S. visa was revoked, and the U.S. ambassador reiterated that his country would have no relations with anyone implicated in the drug trade. Bánzer, however, managed to persuade the MIR to accept exclusion from ministerial positions in order to appease the U.S. government.

      The coalition program, entitled Alliance for Democracy, set out its general aims but made no mention of Bánzer's election promises to review the privatization and capitalization contracts awarded by the previous administration. Bánzer had been an opponent of the sale of national assets, particularly the state-owned oil company. In reality, however, the new coalition had little choice but to continue the process of economic reform begun by the government of Sánchez de Lozada. The policies of trade liberalization, privatization, encouragement of foreign investment, and strict monetary control seemed certain to continue.

      In other developments the Organization of American States (OAS) Inter-American Commission on Human Rights began an investigation of the "Christmas massacre" of December 1996. This incident occurred when the occupation of two gold mines in the Potosí department, to prevent the exploitation of gold reserves on sacred ancestral lands, ended with violent clashes between miners and the government troops, leaving 11 dead and about 50 wounded. The chief of the national police, accused of having ordered troops to open fire on the occupants, was dismissed. The dark spectre of military rule was also raised in January when the president of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights was abducted and beaten by members of a police intelligence unit.

ALAN MURPHY

▪ 1997

      Bolivia is a landlocked republic in central South America. Area: 1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi). Pop. (1996 est.): 7,593,000. Administrative cap., La Paz; judicial cap., Sucre. Monetary unit: boliviano, with (Oct. 11, 1996) a free rate of Bs5.17 to U.S. $1 (Bs8.14 = £1 sterling). President in 1996, Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada Bustamente.

      The municipal elections of December 1995 shifted the balance of support from the ruling Nationalist Revolutionary Movement (MNR) to its coalition partners, Civic Solidarity Union (UCS) and Free Bolivia Movement (MBL). The MNR won 21% of the vote, while the UCS won 17% and the MBL 13%. The opposition party Conscience of the Fatherland won 15%. Pres. Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada Bustamente extended his term of office by one year until August 1998, although a public opinion survey showed little support for the government.

      The social unrest of 1995 continued in 1996. A four-week general strike, including a 46-day hunger strike, was called off by the Bolivian Worker's Central (COB) at the end of April. Called in protest against the government's economic policies, including the privatization program, the strike failed as unions became more divided. The COB refused to take part in negotiations between the oil workers union and the government over the government's plan to sell the oil company Yacimientos Petroliferos Fiscales Bolivianos. The strike ended with a clear defeat for the unions: a 9% wage increase for all public-sector workers compared with the 12% they had demanded. A minimum wage of $45 per week was agreed upon for all public- and private-sector workers.

      Opposition to the government's sale of the oil company resulted in the resignation in mid-April of Irving Alcaráz del Castillo, minister for social communication, who was blamed for failure to stem the opposition. In mid-March another Cabinet minister, Alfonso Revollo, was accused by jailed banker Jorge Cordova of having demanded a $50,000 election contribution to secure the merger of two leading banks. The secretary-general of the opposition Movement of the Revolutionary Left, Oscar Eid Franco, was jailed on charges of maintaining links with drug lords. (ALAN MURPHY)

▪ 1996

      Bolivia is a landlocked republic in central South America. Area: 1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi). Pop. (1995 est.): 7,414,000. Administrative cap., La Paz; judicial cap., Sucre. Monetary unit: boliviano, with (Oct. 6, 1995) a free rate of Bs4.87 to U.S. $1 (Bs7.69 = £1 sterling). President in 1995, Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada Bustamente.

      During 1995 the government pressed ahead with its Capitalization Program, aiming to transfer state enterprises to private control. Those on the list were electricity (ENDE), telecommunications (ENTEL), railways (ENFE), the airline (LAB), steel (ENAF), and the oil and gas corporation (YPFB), whose output alone accounted for 9% of Bolivia's gross domestic product. The scheme was innovative, with 50% of the shares in the enterprises being transferred to all Bolivian citizens in the form of pension fund contributions. The other half was to be sold to private investors.

      YPFB, which produced 75% of the country's gas and 81% of its oil, was expected to be auctioned in December after first having been divided into five operating companies. Its value was increased by the agreement signed in July by the presidents of Bolivia and Brazil to build a $2 billion gas pipeline linking Santa Cruz de la Sierra and Potosí in Bolivia with São Paulo in Brazil. Negotiations were difficult, but World Bank and Inter-American Development Bank funding was expected, as well as export credit agency financing from around the world.

      Despite the purported benefits to the population, the Capitalization Program was deeply unpopular among workers, who feared job losses. Labour unrest and civil disturbances were widespread throughout the year and brought fears that investors would be discouraged. April was a month of civil unrest as teachers, hospital workers, and some state miners went on strike, demanding higher wages and protesting educational and economic reforms. A state of emergency was declared; nighttime curfew was imposed, security forces were given sweeping powers of arrest, and all public meetings were banned. More than 100 unionists were imprisoned in remote Andean villages. The teachers ended their 50-day strike in May after the government agreed to reconsider pay cuts.

      Social unrest flared up again in July with strikes and violent clashes. There were battles between police and coca growers in the Chapare region following the arrest of representatives of 53 coca farmers. The U.S. administration required Bolivia to destroy 1,750 ha (4,323 ac) of coca plantations by the end of June or have aid cut and sanctions imposed. The target was achieved, but at the price of much resentment. A second 90-day state of emergency was imposed on July 18, when the earlier one expired. The Bolivian Labour Confederation organized a 24-hour general strike in protest. (SARAH CAMERON)

▪ 1995

      Bolivia is a landlocked republic in central South America. Area: 1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi). Pop. (1994 est.): 7,888,000. Administrative cap., La Paz; judicial cap., Sucre. Monetary unit: boliviano, with (Oct. 7, 1994) a free rate of 4.66 bolivianos to U.S. $1 (7.41 bolivianos = £1 sterling). President in 1994, Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada Bustamente.

      In January 1994 Pres. Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada presented to Congress draft legislation for privatizing six state companies (electricity, telecommunications, the railways, an ironworks, the oil and gas corporation, and the national airline, Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano). The intention was to encourage private investment in up to half the equity of each company. The remaining shares would be given to the adult population to be deposited in private pension funds. It was hoped that the capitalization scheme would raise $3 billion in foreign investment over three years, cut unemployment, and increase gross domestic product threefold.

      Although Congress passed the bill in March, the prospect of foreign involvement in state utilities and resources aroused fierce protests in February and again in April and May. A wave of strikes against privatization but linked to wage demands disrupted transportation, industry, and government. Contrary to its policies of reducing both the budget deficit and inflation, the government on May 7 conceded public-sector pay raises that were above the rate of inflation and increased the minimum urban salary. The cost of living was forecast to rise in 1994 by about 8%, roughly one percentage point below the 1993 increase.

      During the protests tension was heightened by the force-feeding of hunger strikers and the deployment of the army. Military action against drug growers in the Chaparé region during the first half of the year was criticized as excessively violent. This was an effort to meet a September 30 deadline to destroy 5,000 ha (12,350 ac) of coca in order to qualify for a $40 million grant from the U.S. to promote alternative crops. Bolivia had failed to meet an original deadline of Dec. 31, 1993. The renewed assault on drug cultivation was accompanied by a new banking code of ethics designed to prevent the laundering of narcotics proceeds, although the Superintendency of Banking refused to lift secrecy laws.

      Resentment against the U.S. influence on Bolivian drug policy was compounded by suggestions that the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration helped prepare a report that accused former president Jaime Paz Zamora and several officials of his administration of involvement in the drug trade. While he admitted some misjudgments, Paz denied the charges but thereafter renounced politics. U.S. agents were also thought to be behind allegations of corruption that led to the impeachment of the Supreme Court's president and one of its judges.

      After months of negotiation the governments of Bolivia and Brazil signed an accord in August approving a $2 billion natural gas pipeline. Bolivia would supply southern and southeastern Brazil with 8 million cu m (282 million cu ft) of gas per day from 1997. In September Bolivia and Mexico signed a free-trade pact, due to come into effect on Jan. 1, 1995. (BEN BOX)

▪ 1994

      Bolivia is a landlocked republic in central South America. Area: 1,098,581 sq km (424,164 sq mi). Pop. (1993 est.): 7,715,000. Administrative cap., La Paz; judicial cap., Sucre. Monetary unit: boliviano, with (Oct. 4, 1993) a free rate of 4.33 bolivianos to U.S. $1 (6.56 bolivianos = £1 sterling). Presidents in 1993, Jaime Paz Zamora and, from August 6, Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada Bustamente.

       Bolivia held presidential and congressional elections in June 1993. The principal presidential contenders were Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada of the Nationalist Revolutionary Movement (NRM); Hugo Banzer Suárez of Nationalist Democratic Action and leader of the Patriotic Accord; Max Fernández, a brewery owner and head of Civic Solidarity Union; and Carlos Palenque of Conscience of the Fatherland and a talk-show host. Sánchez de Lozada won 34% of the vote, while his party fell short of the 79 seats required for an absolute majority in Congress. Sánchez de Lozada's opponents conceded defeat before a second ballot was called.

      Among the reasons for the NRM victory was disillusion with the previous government's inability to capitalize on the economic stability introduced in 1985 by Sánchez de Lozada himself. Inflation fell to 11% in 1992 (with 9% forecast for 1993); gross domestic product grew by 3.4%; and net reserves stood at over $200 million. In contrast, the trade deficit, at $561 million in 1992, was the worst in a decade. The main causes were the termination of a fixed-price agreement on gas sales to Argentina and declining nontraditional exports. It was expected that the target of 3.2% for the public-sector deficit set by the International Monetary Fund would be exceeded, threatening a rescheduling agreement with the Paris Club of creditor nations. In addition, the UN and the World Bank stated that Bolivia still had the highest percentage of rural poverty in the world and that per capita income, at $700, was 20% lower in 1993 than in 1980. This indicated that economic stability had not benefited the poorest sectors. On March 1, members of the Bolivian Labour Federation began a hunger strike and a general strike for salary increases.

      The cocaine trade remained a major contributor to the economy, although U.S. and Bolivian antinarcotics agencies claimed some success in limiting the cultivation of coca and the illegal export of coca paste and cocaine.

      In the key mining sector, Comibol, the state-owned mining corporation, closed two mines as international metal prices fell but also opened new facilities. Negotiations collapsed between the government and Lithco of the U.S. on the exploitation of the world's largest lithium deposit. The government's failure to define clear rules for joint ventures and privatization eroded hopes for renewed foreign investment. Sánchez de Lozada unveiled a plan for capitalization of state companies, rather than privatization, that would involve selling 49% of selected enterprises to private investors, who would then help restore efficiency before the government stake was distributed to the Bolivian people.

      In April, Gen. Luís García Meza, who, as dictator in 1980, had been associated with cocaine trafficking, was sentenced to prison for 30 years in absentia, having jumped bail in 1989. (BEN BOX)

* * *

Introduction
officially  Republic of Bolivia,  Spanish  República de Bolivia 
Bolivia, flag of  country of west-central South America. Extending some 950 miles (1,500 km) north-south and 800 miles (1,300 km) east-west, Bolivia is bordered to the north and east by Brazil, to the southeast by Paraguay, to the south by Argentina, to the southwest and west by Chile, and to the northwest by Peru. Bolivia shares Lake Titicaca, the second largest lake in South America (after Lake Maracaibo), with Peru. The country has been landlocked since it lost its Pacific coast territory to Chile in the War of the Pacific (1879–84), but agreements with neighbouring countries have granted it indirect access to the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. The constitutional capital is the historic city of Sucre, where the Supreme Court is established, but the de facto capital is La Paz, where the executive and legislative branches of government function.

      Bolivia is traditionally regarded as a highland country. Although only one-third of its territory lies in the Andes Mountains, most of the nation's largest cities are located there, and for centuries the highlands have attracted the nation's largest amount of mining, commercial, and business investment. In the late 20th century, however, the demographic and economic landscape began to change as the eastern lowlands—particularly the department of Santa Cruz—developed rapidly.

      The country has a rich history. It was once the centre of the ancient Tiwanaku (Tiahuanaco) empire, and from the 15th to the early 16th century it was a part of the Inca empire. After the arrival of the conquistadores, Bolivia was subsumed within the Viceroyalty of Peru, and it provided Spain with immense wealth in silver. Spanish and the Indian languages Aymara and Quechua are official languages. The majority of the people are Roman Catholic.

The land (Bolivia)

Relief
 Bolivia's mountainous western region, which is one of the highest inhabited areas in the world, constitutes an important economic and political centre. There the Andes reach their greatest breadth and complexity. The system in Bolivia is dominated by two great parallel ranges. To the west along the border with Chile is the Cordillera Occidental, which contains numerous active volcanoes and the spectacular Uyuni Salt Flat; the cordillera is crowned by the republic's highest peak, Mount Sajama, reaching an elevation of 21,463 feet (6,542 metres). To the east is the Cordillera Oriental (Real, Cordillera), whose spectacular northern section near La Paz is called Cordillera Real (“Royal Range”). An impressive line of snowcapped peaks, some exceeding 20,000 feet (6,100 metres), characterize this northern section, which maintains an average elevation of more than 18,000 feet (5,500 metres) for more than 200 miles (320 km). Between these ranges lies the Altiplano (“High Plateau”), which extends from southern Peru through Bolivia to northern Argentina. The plateau is a relatively flat-floored depression about 500 miles (800 km) long and 80 miles (130 km) wide, lying at elevations between 12,000 and 12,500 feet (3,650 and 3,800 metres). To the north of the Cordillera Real is the Apolobamba range, bordered on the western slopes by lakes and protected areas where vicuñas, alpacas, and llamas thrive. Terraced fields built hundreds of years ago lie at the foothills of snow-covered peaks, which have been sacred to the Indians since ancient times.

      The surface of the Altiplano is composed mostly of water- and wind-borne deposits from the bordering mountains, and it slopes gently southward, its evenness broken by occasional hills and ridges. The margins of the Altiplano are characterized by numerous spurs and interlocking alluvial fans (accumulations of silt, gravel, and other debris that were brought down from the mountains and that have spread out in the shape of a fan). In the middle of the Altiplano are the Titicaca and Poopó lakes and basins, which are important agricultural, economic, and cultural areas.

      From the high, snowcapped slopes of the Cordillera Real and the Apolobamba range, the descent to the eastern plains is extremely precipitous, plunging through a rainy and heavily forested belt of rugged terrain known as the Yungas—an Aymara word roughly translated as “Warm Lands” or “Warm Valleys.” The Yungas form the southern end of a region that extends along the eastern Andes of Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru (where it is called the Alto Selva [“High Rainforest”]) and continues southeast through Bolivia as far as Santa Cruz. In Bolivia the name Yungas often refers to a smaller region northeast of La Paz, which, like the neighbouring region of Alto Beni (the upper basin of the Beni River north of Caranavi), is part of the larger Yungas region.

      In southern Bolivia the Andes become much wider and are formed by a high, tilted block called the Puna, with west-facing escarpments and more gentle eastward slopes down to the plains. The Puna is broken up by the Valles, a system of fertile valleys and mountain basins that are generally larger and less confined than those in the Yungas. They lie at elevations mostly between 6,000 and 9,500 feet (1,800 and 2,900 metres) and are noted for their rich, varied agriculture and the so-called garden cities of Cochabamba, Sucre, and Tarija.

      North and east of the Andes and Yungas is the Oriente region, an extension of the Amazon River basin that covers more than two-thirds of Bolivia. The vast area of the Oriente is composed of low alluvial plains (llanos), great swamps, flooded bottomlands, open savannas, and tropical forests. It supports the greatest variety of wildlife in the nation, as well as the largest population centre (Santa Cruz city) and the fastest-growing of Bolivia's regional economies. In the extreme south is the Bolivian Chaco, which forms part of the Gran Chaco; it is a level area that varies strikingly with the seasons. During the rainy season it becomes a veritable swamp, but it is a hot semidesert during the remaining seven or eight months of the year. Northward from the Chaco the relief of the Santa Cruz department is somewhat more varied, exhibiting a gentle downward slope to the north. The Oriente includes much of the northern departments of Beni and Pando, where the low plains are covered by savanna and, in the far north, by expanses of tropical rainforest.

Drainage
      The rivers of Bolivia belong to three major systems—the Amazon (Amazon River) tributaries in the northwest, north, and northeast, the Pilcomayo (Pilcomayo River)-Paraguay (Paraguay River) system in the south and southeast, and an isolated, inland-draining system centring on Lakes Titicaca and Poopó on the Altiplano in the west. The Uyuni Salt Flat is a smaller inland-draining basin nearby but separate from the Titicaca-Poopó system.

      The great swampy and forested plains along the northeastward-flowing Beni (Beni River) and Mamoré (Mamoré River) rivers, which are headwaters of the Amazon River, contain several lakes and lagoons, some of them large, such as Lakes Rogagua and Rogoaguado. The Amazon headwaters cut deeply into the Andes; even La Paz in the far west—only a short journey from Lake Titicaca—is in the Amazon drainage basin. Serving as the border between Bolivia and Brazil, the Iténez River flows north toward Guayaramerín. Great stretches of these rivers are navigable.

      The Pilcomayo River originates near Sucre and Potosí. It cuts southeastward across the Puna, gathering the waters of the Pilaya River west of Villamontes before entering the Gran Chaco, where it forms part of the border with Argentina; farther southeast, at Asunción, Paraguay, it joins the Paraguay River. Far upstream from that confluence, the Paraguay runs southward parallel to Bolivia's far eastern border. In the vicinity of the river in Bolivia are several shallow lakes, the largest of which are Cáceres, Mandioré, Gaiba, and Uberaba. North of these are the great Xarayes Swamps. This region, like that in the northeast, is subject to widespread flooding during summer. The eastern lowlands of Bolivia adjoin Brazil's Pantanal (wetland) system, which also drains into the Paraguay River.

      The third watershed constitutes the largest region of inland drainage in South America. Lake Titicaca (Titicaca, Lake) alone covers 3,200 square miles (8,300 square km)—nearly the size of Puerto Rico—and is South America's largest inland lake (coastal Lake Maracaibo is more extensive). Situated on the Bolivian-Peruvian border at an elevation of 12,500 feet (3,810 metres), it is also the world's highest commercially navigable lake. Because of its depth, which averages two to three times that of Maracaibo, Titicaca also holds the greatest volume of standing fresh water on the continent. Of the many islands dotting its surface, the best known in Bolivian waters are the Islands of the Sun and Moon (Sol, Isla del), both sacred sites of Inca mythology. The basin's drainage system maintains Titicaca as a largely freshwater lake despite its high evaporation rate. Water from the lake feeds the Desaguadero River, which eventually connects to salty Lake Poopó (Poopó, Lake). Occupying a very shallow depression in the plateau, only a few feet below the general level of the surrounding land, Lake Poopó is rarely more than 10 feet (3 metres) deep. When its waters are low, it covers an area of some 1,000 square miles (2,600 square km); the surrounding land is so flat, however, that at high water the lake may reach almost to Oruro to the north, fully 30 miles (50 km) from its low-water shore. Both lakes continue to support a wide variety of wildlife, as well as numerous rural communities. The Lacajahuira River, the only visible outlet of Lake Poopó, disappears underground for part of its course and empties into the Coipasa Salt Flat, which at high water covers about the same area as Lake Poopó does at low water; it usually consists of wide, marshy, salt-encrusted wastes, with a small permanent body of water in the lowest part of the basin. There is no outlet.

      The Uyuni Salt Flat, a hydrologically isolated area that lies to the south of the Coipasa Salt Flat, is similar but much larger. Covering about 4,000 square miles (10,400 square km), it is a windswept expanse that is even more extensive than Lake Titicaca. South of the Uyuni Salt Flat are the much smaller Lakes Colorado and Verde, as well as hot springs, geysers, and a rich variety of wildlife, all at the base of picturesque inactive volcanoes. This highland region is often hard to reach during the rainy season.

Soils
      The soils of the Altiplano—mainly clays, sands, and gravels—are dry and loosely consolidated; slopes that are exposed to strong winds or storm water are severely eroded. Soils to the south of the plateau are highly saline, but in the north rich topsoils border Lake Titicaca. In the Yungas the soils on the steep valley sides erode rapidly wherever forest is cleared and the slopes are not carefully terraced. The wider basins in the Valles region, particularly around Cochabamba, contain deeper, more fertile soils that respond well to irrigation. In the Oriente, topsoil quality varies, but there are large fertile expanses in Santa Cruz, where soybeans, cotton, and corn (maize) are grown.

Climate
      Although Bolivia lies wholly within the tropics, it possesses every gradation of temperature from that of the equatorial lowlands to arctic cold. In the Andes, contrasts in temperature and rainfall depend more on elevation and cloud cover than on distance from the Equator, and cold winds sweep the Altiplano year-round. The rainy season is from December to March, but precipitation varies greatly throughout the highlands. Average temperatures range between 45 and 52 °F (7 and 11 °C) during the day, occasionally reaching as high as 60 °F (16 °C), but temperatures at night are much colder and fall below freezing during the winter. In the north, however, Lake Titicaca has an important moderating influence, and in bright sunshine winter temperatures may reach as high as 70 °F (21 °C). Cloudless skies and remarkably clear air bring distant Andean peaks sharply into focus, providing beautiful vistas across the Altiplano. In the winter the Andean skies are often a deep blue.

      In stark contrast, clouds of moist air from the Oriente fill the valleys of the Yungas throughout the year, leaving the humid atmosphere rich with the smell of vegetation. The mean annual temperatures vary between 60 and 68 °F (16 and 20 °C). Precipitation, which ranges up to 53 inches (1,350 mm) annually, occurs throughout the year but is heaviest between December and February. The Valles have brighter conditions and less precipitation than the Yungas, as well as somewhat warmer temperatures.

      On the low plains of the Oriente the climate is hot, averaging 73 to 77 °F (23 to 25 °C) or higher in the south and up to 80 °F (27 °C) in the north. Occasional cold winds called surazos blow from the south, lowering temperatures abruptly. They are laden with sand, high humidity, and dust and last for a few days. Annual rainfall ranges from about 40 inches (1,000 mm) in the south to 70 inches (1,800 mm) or more in the far north, with a pronounced summer maximum. Part of Beni suffers from extensive flooding beginning in March or April, toward the end of the summer rainy season.

Plant life
      Huge expanses of the southern Altiplano are saline and barren, but ichu (a coarse bunchgrass) is common in the north, where it is grazed by llamas. Tola (a tough, wind-resistant shrub) and mosslike cushions of yareta, both widely used for fuel, are well distributed, along with cactus scrub. Totora reeds, which grow on the shores of Lake Titicaca, are used for thatching, feeding livestock, and making the Indian boats called balsas. Native quishuara and khena trees can still be found on the Altiplano. Near Mount Sajama, at an elevation of 14,000 feet (4,300 metres), one of the highest forests of khena trees has survived. Eucalyptus and pine trees have been introduced around the shores of Lake Titicaca and in sheltered valleys. Large stretches of the Altiplano are planted in field crops.

      The Yungas region of the Andean foothills is clad in luxuriant mountain rainforest that includes an enormous variety of tropical hardwoods, dyewoods, medicinal and aromatic plants, and fruit trees. Characteristic trees include the green pine, aliso (a shrublike tree), laurel, cedar, tarco (a shade tree producing masses of yellow-white flowers), and saúco (which yields fruit used to make medicinal syrups). The cinchona, or quina tree, from which quinine is made, and the coca shrub, the source of cocaine, are also indigenous there. In the Valles region to the south there is a general covering of drought-resistant grasses, shrubs, and small trees, and in the southern foothill zone there is a strip of deciduous forest with such trees as the walnut and quebracho, the latter being a source of tannin and timber.

      At lower elevations in the Oriente, vegetation is strongly controlled by the degree of waterlogging that occurs and by the length of the dry season. In the south the Chaco is scrub-covered, with scattered stands of quebracho giving way northward to a region of semideciduous tropical forest. Farther north in the Oriente, grass, palm, and swamp savannas extend into Beni. There, strips of tropical forest line the riverbanks, whereas more continuous forest appears in eastern and northeastern Bolivia. True Amazonian rainforest (selva amazónica) occurs only in the far north in the department of Pando and adjacent areas. Among the thousands of different trees are Hevea brasiliensis (the most common rubber tree), Bertholletia excelsa (the source of Brazil nuts), and mahogany. Cattle raising and logging operations, many of them illegal, place an increasing strain on forested areas throughout the Yungas and the Oriente.

Animal life
 Bolivian highland animal life is distinguished by the presence of members of the camel family—the llama, alpaca, guanaco, and vicuña, all native to the Andes. The llama and alpaca are domesticated varieties of the wild guanaco, which survives in the mountains. The llama, the largest animal on the Altiplano and seldom seen below elevations of 7,500 feet (2,300 metres), is the traditional beast of burden and is also a source of meat, wool, leather, tallow, and fuel (in the form of dried dung) in rural Andean communities. It is also used for ancient Aymara and Quechua religious rites, in which it may be sacrificed in honour of Pachamama (Pacha Mama), goddess of the Earth. The smaller alpaca is reared for its soft wool, although the wild, legally protected vicuña that is found in the southern and northern parts of the Altiplano produces an even silkier type of wool. Highland rodents include the chinchilla, the viscacha (a burrower), the mara (a long-legged, long-eared cavy), and the cui (a guinea pig bred for its meat and often kept as a pet). The Andean condor, a New World vulture and the largest flying bird in the Americas, roosts and breeds at elevations between 10,000 and 16,000 feet (3,000 and 4,900 metres). Many smaller birds and waterfowl, including grebes, coots, cormorants, ducks, geese, and gulls, live around Lake Titicaca, and large flocks of flamingos appear during several months of the year on Titicaca's shallow shores and farther south around Lake Poopó. Trout are found in several of the rivers on the Altiplano.

      The rivers of the eastern plains, most of which belong to the Amazon system, have an abundance of fish, and there are numerous frogs, toads, and lizards, along with myriad forms of insect life. The armadillo, anteater, peccary (wild pig), puma, and marsh deer all inhabit the plains, as do the capybara (the largest rodent in the world) and the rhea (a flightless bird that resembles the ostrich but is much smaller).

      The rich animal life of the northern forests includes such mammals as the jaguar (the largest of the American cats), sloth, and tapir and several species of monkey; the largest of the numerous reptiles is the caiman (a member of the alligator family), and among the many fish species is the carnivorous piranha (caribe). Varieties of snakes include constrictors and such venomous species as the fer-de-lance and the bushmaster. Many brightly coloured birds, notably parrots and toucans, inhabit the forests, seldom descending to the forest floor; high in the sky above them may be seen the king vulture and the black vulture, gliding in search of carrion. In the eastern wetlands along the Brazilian border, Noel Kempff Mercado (formerly Huanchaca) National Park alone has more than 500 species of birds. Madidi National Park, established in northwestern Bolivia in 1995, supports a wide range of animal life, including 1,000 or more bird species.

Settlement patterns
      The three principal regions of settlement are the Altiplano, the Valles, and the Santa Cruz region of the Oriente.

      The Aymara and later the Inca found that the Altiplano could be cultivated and that it was healthier and more invigorating than the hot, wet lowland plains. The central Altiplano (in western Bolivia) has remained Bolivia's most densely populated region; the cities of La Paz and Oruro are located there, as are many small towns and villages. The National Revolution of 1952 introduced a new domestic colonization program that was designed to increase food production and encourage campesinos to leave the most densely populated parts of the Altiplano and the Valles. Three areas were selected for new settlement: the Yungas and Alto Beni (both part of the larger Yungas region bordering the Andes), the Chaparé foothills below Cochabamba, and the plains of the Oriente around Santa Cruz. For the last of these regions, the opening in 1954 of a paved highway between Cochabamba and Santa Cruz was of crucial importance, because it relieved centuries of isolation between the Andes and the plains. Within 25 years about 65,000 families settled in these pioneer zones. The domestic colonization program, however, failed to relieve significantly the population pressure in the Andean highlands, where in the same period the population increased nearly 10 times more than the number of eastern settlers. It was not until the late 20th century that very large numbers of people moved from the highlands to the lowlands.

The Altiplano (Altiplano)
      Much farming on the Altiplano is still of the subsistence type, with tiny holdings; however, there have been dramatic changes since the National Revolution. Until the early 1950s the land was held primarily in the form of large estates called latifundios; most of these dated to the days of the Spanish conquistadores, although some land was held communally by the Indians. Following the 1953 Agrarian Reform Act, the latifundios were broken up and plots of land given to the rural Indians, who are also called campesinos (peasants). Despite initial confusion caused by the sheer speed of the reform, reduced agricultural production, and the disruption to marketing, there was an infusion of fresh spirit and purpose among Bolivia's new campesino landowners during subsequent decades. One development was the growth of new roadside market towns on the northern Altiplano where Indians could sell their farm surpluses and a wide range of other goods. These were carried to market on foot or by bicycle or truck from the valleys of the Yungas. Other Indians brought wares from La Paz.

      The city of La Paz stood as the unrivaled urban centre of Bolivia until the late 20th century, when Santa Cruz's population and economic prowess began to challenge it. La Paz lies in a large, spectacular canyon cut below the surface of the Altiplano, a sheltered location selected by the Spaniards in 1548 on the main silver route to the Pacific coast. Colonial churches and other historic buildings survive there. The city grew rapidly in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as the railway centre and de facto capital of the country. The industrial and lower-income areas of the city are located high up on the valley sides and on the surrounding plateau, whereas the commercial district is at the middle level and the middle-class residential areas at the lower levels. In the 1980s and '90s an increasing number of fancy neighbourhoods were built that included amenities such as modern supermarkets, fast-food restaurants, and nightclubs. The city centre changed dramatically with the construction of several new skyscrapers.

      As the core zones of La Paz and other cities became more developed, their urban fringes also experienced rapid change, mainly because of an increase in migration from poorer rural areas. A prime example on the outskirts of La Paz is El Alto, which became one of the fastest-growing cities in the Western Hemisphere, its population increasing from 307,400 in 1989 to more than a half million in the mid-1990s. El Alto is made up largely of Aymara immigrants from the Altiplano who continue to maintain ties with their traditional lands. Amid their brick and adobe houses thrives a rich mixture of Andean and Western cultural traditions. The other cities of the Altiplano— Oruro, Uyuni, and Tupiza—are also railway towns. These cities were important commercial and mining centres in the 19th and early 20th centuries, attracting hundreds of European immigrants who built beautiful homes and public buildings while also introducing their cultural values.

       Potosí, east of the Altiplano, merits special attention. It was established in 1545 on the slopes of Mount Potosí (Cerro Rico), which contained the richest source of silver found by the Spaniards. Potosí had about 150,000 inhabitants in the mid-17th century and was the largest city in the Americas. Even now, at more than 13,000 feet (4,000 metres), Potosí is the highest city of its size in the world and an important tourist attraction.

The Valles and the Oriente
      The three most important cities in the Valles are Cochabamba, Sucre, and Tarija—all founded in the 16th century. Each is surrounded by farms, fruit orchards, and dairy land. Cochabamba is the largest, busiest, and most accessible of the cities. Tarija is the most isolated—its mountain roads are tortuous, and the city has never been linked to Bolivia's rail system. Its climate is milder than that of the Altiplano, however.

      The Oriente is the largest and most sparsely populated region, with the exception of Santa Cruz, eastern Bolivia's only major city, and its environs. Officially known as Santa Cruz de la Sierra, the city lies close to the Andean foothills but is very much a city of the plains. Since the mid-1950s it has been the fastest-growing centre of agricultural colonization in Bolivia, the main production centre for oil and natural gas, and the focus of an increasing share of electric power generation. By the 1970s Santa Cruz had overtaken Cochabamba to become Bolivia's second largest city—a unique example of a long-isolated town in the Oriente overtaking a major Andean centre—and by the end of the 20th century the city's population approached a million, surpassing that of La Paz. The city boasts golf courses, fashionable neighbourhoods, and some of the best restaurants in Bolivia and has become a popular vacation spot, with several luxury hotels.

       Trinidad is the main town in the heart of the remote, sprawling, cattle-ranching department of Beni. Farther north in the Oriente the towns of Riberalta, Guayaramerín, and Cobija (the capital of Pando department) have benefited from regular air links with the rest of the country and the harvesting and processing of Brazil nuts.

The people (Bolivia)

Ethnic and linguistic groups
      The population of Bolivia consists of three groups—Indians (South American Indian) (the indigenous peoples), mestizos (mestizo) (of mixed Indian and European descent), and whites of European (mainly Spanish) descent. After centuries of intermixing, it is difficult to determine the proportion of each, but it is estimated that Indians form nearly three-fifths of the total, mestizos nearly one-third, and whites one-seventh.

      The largest Indian groups are the Aymara, Quechua, and Guaraní. The Aymara, who speak a guttural language, live mainly on the northern and central Altiplano. The Quechua, direct descendants of the Inca, are found in the southern Altiplano and on nearby mountains as well as in the valleys of Cochabamba, Chuquisaca, and Potosí. Guaraní communities, such as the Chimane, Mojeno, Guarayo, and Chiquitano, live in the lowland forests and savannas of southern Santa Cruz department, and the departments of Chuquisaca and Tarija. The great majority of Bolivian Indians are farmers, miners, and factory or construction workers; however, an increasing number have become professionals, and Aymara and Quechua political leaders have been elected to Congress. Victor Hugo Cardenas, an Aymara from the shores of Lake Titicaca, served as vice president of Bolivia in 1993–97. Aymara and Quechua are now official languages in Bolivia, along with Spanish, but many Indians, particularly in the cities, market towns, and new colonies, speak or understand Spanish. The government is promoting multicultural and multilingual education and the establishment of indigenous territories in the tropical lowlands.

      In the cities the mestizos, many of whom are either migrants from rural areas or their descendants, are well represented in the offices, trades, and small businesses. The traditional white minority—those of Spanish descent—have long formed the local aristocracy in small towns and rural areas. Their influence remains, although it has diminished since the National Revolution of 1952.

      In addition to immigrants from Germany, the Balkan region, Japan, and England, the nation has received Mennonites from Mexico and Paraguay. Many foreigners who worked in the highland mining centres of Potosí and Oruro eventually settled in Bolivia and have played an important role in the country's political, economic, and social life. Small numbers of Germans arrived in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and established themselves, with notable success, as business agents and entrepreneurs, shopkeepers, and accountants. Japanese and Okinawan farmers, who first arrived in 1899 and were followed by many thousands in the late 1950s and the '60s, have made major contributions to the economy of Santa Cruz.

Religious groups
      Roman Catholicism is the official religion, but freedom of religion is guaranteed by the constitution. The proportion of Roman Catholics (Roman Catholicism) has decreased slowly but still accounts for more than four-fifths of the population. A primate cardinalship, located in Sucre, heads the church hierarchy in Bolivia. Since the 1940s the Roman Catholic church has ventured from an almost exclusively ceremonial role into the fields of social aid, the news media, and education.

      Some characteristics of pantheistic pre-Columbian religion have survived in the Indian communities of the Altiplano, especially the worship of Pachamama, the goddess of the Earth. Also worshiped is the sun god, legendary creator of the first Inca emperor Manco Capac and his sister-wife Mama Ocllo on the Island of the Sun in Lake Titicaca. Through the centuries, the Roman Catholic church has accepted some indigenous rituals and customs by assimilation, mainly through combined Catholic and traditional celebrations that continue to be an important part of life in rural and urban settings. For example, in the mining cities of Potosí and Oruro, tens of thousands of Bolivians and foreign tourists celebrate Carnival by paying homage to the Virgin of the Mines and to Pachamama. During the festival, dancers wear elaborate masks and outfits that depict devils, their blue-eyed mistresses, Inca rulers, and African slave drivers. In the mines, llamas are sacrificed as part of the worship of Pachamama and of Tío, the protector of the mines. In the late 20th century membership grew in various Protestant denominations (notably Evangelical churches), and there were also increasing numbers of Bahāʾīs and Mormons. Bolivia has a small Jewish community.

Demography
      At the beginning of the 20th century the population of Bolivia was estimated at 1,800,000. After 25 years of slow growth thereafter it had increased to about 2,300,000. Between 1925 and 1950 the population grew at a slightly accelerated rate (despite the losses of the Chaco War), increasing by about 750,000. The population increased dramatically by at least 2,250,000 (to some 5,300,000) during the next 25 years as the death rate fell and the birth rate remained consistently high. During the last quarter of the 20th century the rate of population growth slowed somewhat but was still among the higher rates in Latin America.

      The rate of urbanization has paralleled that of population growth. At the beginning of the 20th century fewer than one-tenth of Bolivians lived in urban areas, but by 1950 the urban population had more than doubled. At the end of the 20th century nearly two-thirds of Bolivians were urban.

The economy
      Bolivia is well endowed with natural resources. Among the country's most valuable assets are its mineral deposits, hydrocarbons (petroleum and natural gas), and its renewable natural resources, such as agricultural and forest products, especially soybeans and Brazil nuts. Its economic development has been limited, however, by high production costs and lack of investment; persisting obstacles include an inadequate transportation infrastructure and the country's landlocked location. Average per capita income is low, and Bolivia remains one of the poorest countries in South America.

      The revolutionary program of 1952–53 included immediate agrarian reform, based on breaking up the large estates and nationalizing the mines. Initially, however, agricultural production decreased, mineral output dropped disastrously, and wages increased. The government, attempting to satisfy the new labour unions, did not reduce the surplus number of miners, nor did it promote greater efficiency in many other sectors of the economy. Thus, despite the long-overdue political and social reforms embodied in the revolution, the rate of national economic growth remained extremely low. The economy, depending on the earnings from tin exportation, fluctuated wildly. In the early 1980s the country's businesses stagnated as a result of falling world tin prices, bad harvests, debt repayments, and inflation that became hyperinflation. In 1985, however, the government of Pres. Víctor Paz Estenssoro (Paz Estenssoro, Víctor) enacted some of the continent's toughest austerity measures and dropped the inflation rate from 24,000 percent to less than 10 percent. In the 1990s the economy grew rapidly, and billions of dollars in new investment came into Bolivia after the administration of Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada Bustamente (1993–97) privatized nearly the entire state-run economy. By 2006, Pres. Juan Evo Morales Ayma (Morales, Evo)—who shares a leftist ideology with close allies Pres. Hugo Chavéz (Chávez, Hugo) of Venezuela and Fidel Castro (Castro, Fidel) of Cuba—had begun a shift back toward the nationalization of Bolivia's industries to counter foreign control and to better fund social programs for the poor.

      Nevertheless, Bolivia continues to receive considerable foreign technical assistance and long-term loans from such organizations as the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank, as well as from numerous creditor nations; however, its governments have been able to shift their priorities from administering deficit-run—and often corrupt—state-owned companies to improving the country's dire health and educational services and transportation infrastructure. Important boosts to the economy also accompanied the rapid development of agriculture and extraction industries in Santa Cruz department, the growth of natural gas and oil exploration in the departments of Tarija, Chuquisaca, Santa Cruz, and Cochabamba, the modernization of the telecommunications industry, and new investments in electric power generation and water services.

Resources
Minerals
      The country is a major producer of tin and gold, and, although its exports of zinc and silver are small parts of the world market, they account for a significant portion of export earnings. Bolivia also has reserves of antimony, tungsten (wolfram), lead, and copper. Tin long dominated metal production, but by the late 20th century both foreign and domestic companies were investing more heavily in gold and silver extraction. The country continues, however, to be exceptionally vulnerable to changes in world tin demand. In the 1980s, for example, a glut in the world market forced the formerly state-owned mining corporation, Corporación Minera de Bolivia (COMIBOL), to cut its production drastically and lay off more than two-thirds of its workforce.

      Until the late 20th century, Bolivian tin and silver were extracted mostly by large shaft- mining operations, often performed in difficult, remote sections of the eastern cordilleras and at high elevations. The ores were low-grade, often varied in content, and were difficult to refine. The rise of open-pit silver- and gold-mining operations, coupled with the privatization of state mining companies, changed the face of Bolivia's mining industry. Many of the mines were taken over by cooperatives owned by former employees. Most workers at the cooperatives, however, continued to labour under extremely difficult conditions and often lacked social benefits.

      After the state pulled out of mineral exploration, most of Bolivia's mineral production fell into the hands of Compañía Minera del Sur (COMSUR), Inti Raymi, and a number of smaller mining companies, as well as foreign-owned companies. Mount Potosí (Cerro Rico), which has been intensively mined since the mid-16th century, sparked renewed interest because of its still-sizable reserves of silver.

Hydrocarbons
      Development of Bolivia's petroleum resources dates from 1920, when the Standard Oil Company of the United States acquired a concession to explore and exploit the Andean foothill zone in southeastern Bolivia. A series of small oil fields were discovered there, but Standard Oil's operation was expropriated in 1937 to form the nationalized Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales Bolivianos (YPFB). In the mid-1950s North American companies were again encouraged to resume operations, and in 1956 the Bolivian Gulf Oil Company (a branch of Gulf Oil Corporation) began a decade of successful oil and natural gas strikes in the Santa Cruz region. In 1966 Gulf began exporting oil to southern California via the YPFB pipeline to the Pacific port of Arica, Chile, and it also boosted the YPFB's sales to the domestic market and to Argentina. Political uncertainties disrupted the industry, however, and in 1969 Bolivia nationalized the Gulf Oil operation. The government again promoted foreign oil investment in 1972, but production continued to fall during subsequent decades because of a lack of capital and the failure to replace depleted wells. In addition, some oil had to be imported to meet soaring domestic consumption. The YPFB was partly privatized in the 1990s.

       natural gas production has been more successful. As world markets for tin diminished, natural gas became Bolivia's most valuable legal export by the mid-1980s, accounting for more than half of official total earnings. Argentina was the principal destination of natural gas exports until 1998, when the Bolivia-Brazil natural gas pipeline was opened. In 2006, President Morales nationalized both the country's natural gas reserves and its oil industry, ordering the military to occupy the fields and giving the state control of energy production. Foreign companies were to hand over majority control to the YPFB.

      Bolivia's rivers have considerable, largely untapped hydroelectric potential (hydroelectric power), and per capita electric consumption remains low. Partly in an effort to improve services, a controlling interest in the National Electric Company was sold in the 1990s to energy companies in the United States and Spain, and the remaining shares were turned over to a national pension system. Hydroelectric stations generate power in the departments of La Paz and Cochabamba, and thermoelectric plants fueled by natural gas generate power in Santa Cruz and Cochabamba for the integrated national distribution system. Foreign companies have also invested in separate electric systems in Tarija and Trinidad, and the Bolivian government has encouraged plans for the exporting of electricity to Brazil.

Agriculture
      About two-fifths of the working population is engaged in agriculture (including small numbers in hunting, forestry, and fishing), but farming accounts for only about one-seventh of the gross domestic product (GDP). Although peasant markets have grown in the northern cities, in roadside towns on the Altiplano, and around Cochabamba, subsistence farming remains widespread in the Andes.

      Potatoes, which are available in thousands of varieties, have been a staple in the Andes since pre-Columbian times, centuries prior to the food's introduction into Europe. Both potatoes and oca (another edible tuber) are indigenous to the northern Altiplano, where they are eaten mainly in the dehydrated forms known as chuño or tunta. The two important grains that ripen at this elevation, both highly nutritious, are quinoa and cañahua (cañihua). Other important crops there include barley, wheat, fava beans, and, around Lake Titicaca, corn (maize). Llamas and alpacas are raised in the Andean region and serve a variety of agricultural functions, although the use of the llama as a pack animal has decreased with the growth of truck transport.

      Among the enormous variety of crops produced in the Yungas are coffee, cacao, citrus fruits, bananas, avocados, pineapples, mangoes, papayas, melons, chili peppers, sweet potatoes (yams), and cassava (manioc). Cultivation of coca leaves, the raw material in the processing of cocaine, continues to play a major role in the economy (see Trade (Bolivia)). In the warm, agreeable climate of the Valles, corn, wheat, barley, alfalfa, grapes, flowers, strawberries, peaches, and vegetables are grown, and sheep and dairy cattle are raised. This fertile region, which is characterized as the garden of Bolivia, has grown further in importance as more-systematic irrigation systems have been introduced and modern farming techniques used.

      In the Oriente around Santa Cruz, soybeans (soybean) are the main crop, and sugarcane, rice (dry and paddy), and cotton are also significant, as is the raising of beef cattle. Soybean production grew dramatically from 81,000 tons in 1986 to 862,000 tons in 1996. By the end of the century, soybeans were one of the most important sources of export earnings, and the area under soybean cultivation was increasing by 10 percent annually. Farther north, Beni department is notable for its large cattle ranches. Tropical hardwoods are exploited in the forests of northern La Paz, Pando, Beni, and Santa Cruz departments, although the logging of rainforests has become a matter of environmental concern.

Industry
      The manufacturing sector has grown since the 1950s but remains small, despite some stimulus from Bolivia's membership in the Andean Group and Mercosur, two regional trade organizations. Historically, mineral processing (including oil refining) and the preparation of agricultural products have dominated Bolivian industry. In the 1970s manufacturing employed about one-tenth of the working population. This proportion declined somewhat in the 1980s but rose again in the '90s, with major investments in the processing of soybeans and the manufacture of textiles, wood products, and soft drinks. Textiles using alpaca, cotton, or synthetics are produced in modern factories in La Paz and exported to the United States and Europe. The manufacture of gold jewelry has also become an important industry in La Paz and El Alto.

      Food industries include flour milling, dairying, sugar refining, brewing, and alcohol distilling. Other manufactures consist of machinery, shoes, furniture, glass, bricks, cement, paper, and a wide range of small goods designed to meet the needs of a limited domestic market. Although two-thirds of Bolivia's manufacturing industry was located in or near La Paz at the end of the 20th century, important new investments have been made in Cochabamba and Santa Cruz. Many Bolivian companies, however, have found it difficult to compete with imported Brazilian, Argentine, Chilean, Peruvian, and Asian manufactures that are often smuggled into the country.

Services
Banking and finance
      The Bolivian banking system is overseen by the government's Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions, founded in 1928. Chief among the five state banks and numerous commercial banks is the Central Bank of Bolivia, which was founded in 1911 as the Bank of the Bolivian Nation; it took its present name in 1928. The Central Bank issues currency and also operates as a commercial bank. The Central Bank is administratively linked to the State Bank (1970); the three other state banks are the Agricultural Bank (1942), the Mining Bank (1936), and the Housing Bank (1964). The country's privately held commercial banks were deregulated in the mid-1980s following three decades of close government control.

      The Bolivian Stock Exchange (1989) is the main stock exchange, and the government's Superintendency of Insurance and Reinsurance (1975) oversees several national companies.

      Tourism is playing an increasingly important role in the economy as Bolivia attracts larger numbers of foreign sightseers. New or refurbished hotels have been opened in the cities of La Paz, Cochabamba, Santa Cruz, and Sucre, as well as in several sites around Lake Titicaca. Because of the country's vast variety of natural and cultural resources, as well as its improved economic and political stability, Bolivia has been added to an increasingly popular grand tour of South America—a package tour of continental highlights that attracts visitors from the United States, Europe, Japan, and other countries. The main Bolivian tourist sites are Lake Titicaca and its surroundings, including Inca ruins on the Island of the Sun, pre-Inca ruins at Tiwanaku, lake fishermen in totora-reed balsas (rafts), Indian villages on the Altiplano, and the city of La Paz itself. Also of interest are the rich and colourful folk pageants presented during Carnival and religious celebrations in the mining cities of Oruro and Potosí, as well as in Cochabamba, Santa Cruz, La Paz, and Sucre.

      A thrilling and popular side trip is taken by road over the Cordillera Real and down into the Yungas jungles closest to La Paz, providing within a few hours some of the most dramatic contrasts in scenery and climate in the Andean region. Other important destinations include the Uyuni Salt Flat, which can be reached via train from Oruro; the Jesuit Missions of the Chiquitos in Santa Cruz, which were added to the World Heritage List (World Heritage site) in 1990; and the renowned Baroque architecture of Sucre and Potosí. Increasingly, tourists are also visiting the tropical towns of Rurrenabaque and Riberalta, the Chaparé River (a tributary to the Mamoré), national parks in the Oriente, and the pre-Columbian ruins at Samaipata (a World Heritage site since 1998) southwest of Santa Cruz.

      Until the late 20th century the export of metals dominated Bolivia's trade, but, with the collapse of the world market in tin in the 1980s, natural gas became a leading export; together, metals, petroleum, and natural gas account for most of Bolivia's legitimate export trade. Soybeans are the principal agricultural export. Manufactured products constitute the largest segment of total imports; machinery and equipment for industry and transport are among the main items. Raw materials, consumer goods, and food products are other major import categories. Bolivia's primary trading partner is the United States. Considerable trade is also carried on with Argentina, Peru, Brazil, Venezuela, and Chile.

      Illegal trade in cocaine continues to have a significant but decreasing impact on the Bolivian economy. The leaves of the indigenous coca (Quechua: kúka) shrub have been chewed by Quechua, Aymara, and Guaraní farmers and miners for centuries as a relief against cold and fatigue, and small quantities of coca have long been legally exported for medicinal purposes; people throughout Peru and Bolivia commonly drink coca-leaf tea and do not consider it harmful. The unprecedented expansion of coca cultivation in the Yungas and, especially, in the Chaparé region northeast of Cochabamba began in the 1960s with the sudden growth in the illegal international market for cocaine. As demand soared in North America and Europe in the 1970s and '80s, Bolivian peasant farmers found that no other crop could compete with coca for profitability. It became the ideal cash crop—easy to grow, valuable, nonperishable, and easy to transport, whether in dried leaf form or as processed cocaine. In the 1980s it was estimated that one-third of the world's coca was grown in Bolivia. Attempts by the government to introduce crop substitution or to induce peasants to voluntarily reduce their coca acreage initially met with little success. Instead, the area devoted to coca cultivation continued to increase, and greater quantities were exported annually from centres around Cochabamba, Santa Cruz, and remote parts of the Oriente. In the 1990s, however, the importance of the Bolivian cocaine trade was undercut by voluntary and forceful eradication programs sponsored by both the United States and Bolivia, as well as by the profitable development of agriculture and other industries in the departments of Cochabamba and Santa Cruz. By the end of the decade, it was estimated that national production had decreased to less than one-fourth of the world total. Drug trafficking has provided a significant addition to the country's gross national product—although this contribution is not officially tabulated as part of the country's economy—and it has contributed to corruption among law enforcement and other government officials. Although Bolivian and U.S. drug enforcement agencies have made inroads against cocaine trafficking activities, the demand for cocaine in foreign countries has continued to feed the drug trade in Bolivia.

Transportation
      Bolivia's economic growth has been hindered both by the landlocked location of the country and by a difficult internal geography of steep mountains and seasonally flooded plains. The situation is ameliorated by agreements with Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay that cover railway connections and duty-free shipping from eastern river ports via the Hidrovía (Paraguay-Paraná Waterway), giving Bolivia access to Atlantic Ocean ports; another treaty, made with Peru in 1993, grants Bolivia overland access to the Pacific Ocean. Barges now regularly carry soybeans and other crops on a two-week trip from Puerto Aguirre (Puerto Quijarro) in eastern Bolivia to Atlantic ports; the ships return with food products, diesel fuel, and industrial goods. The immense river system provides an important means of domestic transportation throughout the tropical lowlands.

      The main rail (railroad) system is in the west; it was built mostly between the 1890s and the 1920s and links the major Andean cities and mines with the Pacific ports of Antofagasta and Arica (both in Chile) and Matarani (Peru), the latter line being connected by shipping across Lake Titicaca. Isolated from this network, the eastern railroad system has its nucleus at Santa Cruz city, which was linked by rail to Corumbá in Brazil and to Argentina via Yacuiba during the 1950s. Since the privatization of the national rail system in 1996, its use for the transport of soybeans, mineral products, and consumer goods has increased rapidly. In 2007, President Morales announced his intention to nationalize Bolivia's railroads and take full control of the state company, the National Railroad Enterprise (Empresa Nacional de Ferrocarriles; ENFE), as part of his plan to reverse the country's privatization efforts of the 1990s. The use of railroads for transporting passengers has decreased, however, as bus services have expanded.

      Road transport has developed rapidly in highland Bolivia and around Santa Cruz since the mid-1950s, and there are connecting paved highways for most major cities as well as for the colonization centres of the Santa Cruz region. Bus and truck services on unpaved roads connect numerous towns and farming communities, yet journeys in these areas are slow and often hazardous, particularly on the narrow, winding mountain roads, which are seldom lined with guardrails. Along the Andean roadsides are numerous white crosses, tributes to those who have died from collisions or from careening off the road.

      Air transport is the only fast link between Bolivia's major cities and is the primary means by which the isolated settlements in the Oriente are connected to the rest of the country, especially in the rainy season, when roads are often destroyed by heavy rains and landslides. The airline Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano (LAB) was founded by a small group of German businessmen in 1925, and in the second half of the 20th century it played an indispensable political role in helping Bolivia maintain control over the plains and the eastern border regions. LAB flies international routes to South American capitals, as well as to other cities such as São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and Manaus (all in Brazil), Panama City (Panama), and Miami (Florida, U.S.). A newer airline, AeroSur, also provides air passenger service to most Bolivian cities, some tropical towns, and Buenos Aires. The Bolivian Air Force company (Transportes Aéreos Militares; TAM) carries passengers to small towns in the tropical Bolivian lowlands, and numerous foreign-owned airlines also serve the country. In the mid-1990s Santa Cruz opened a new airport, which was considered to be one of the more modern on the continent and quickly became Bolivia's main air hub.

Administration and social conditions

Government
      Bolivia was declared independent in 1825 and adopted its first constitution in 1826. Despite revisions and numerous military coups, the state has retained a unitary system of government, whether elected or under military dictatorship, the latter having held sway for much of Bolivia's history. A heavily revised version of the 1967 constitution was promulgated in 1994. According to that document, executive power is vested in a president who is directly elected by popular vote for a five-year term. If no candidate receives an absolute majority of votes, the National Congress must select the president from among the two leading contenders. In January 2009 a new constitution was approved that allowed the president to serve another consecutive five-year term. The bicameral legislature consists of a 27-member Chamber of Senators and a 130-member Chamber of Deputies; members of the legislature are directly elected for five-year terms. The judicial system is headed by a 12-member Supreme Court and a 5-member Constitutional Tribunal, which decides the constitutionality of laws and resolves conflicts between the branches and levels of government. The new constitution required that judges be elected; since 1967 members of both judicial bodies had been appointed by Congress to 10-year terms.

      The country is divided into nine departamentos, each of which is headed by a prefect appointed by the president. Departments are subdivided into provincias administered by subprefects, and these provinces are subdivided into cantones administered by corregidores. Since the enactment of the Popular Participation Law in 1994, the country has also been divided into municipios (“municipalities”), which manage 20 percent of the public sector budget; thus, many communities that had been neglected by the central and provincial governments were able to initiate much-needed public works projects.

      Women have voted in Bolivian elections since 1938, but literacy and property requirements nevertheless restricted electoral participation to a tiny proportion of the population until the National Revolution of 1952, when universal suffrage was introduced. The nation's political system is largely controlled by three political parties; numerous smaller parties ranging in outlook from conservative to left-wing also play a role in the country's political life. Interparty alliances have often been formed to permit national and municipal governments to function.

Education, health, and welfare
      Primary education for children 6 to 13 years of age is free and officially compulsory, although school attendance is difficult to enforce in some areas. Secondary education, lasting up to 4 years, is not compulsory. At the end of the 20th century about four-fifths of the primary-age children were attending school, but the attendance rate among secondary-age children was much lower, only about one-fourth. Most education is state-supported, but private institutions are permitted. Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish organizations also maintain schools. Adult literacy rates have climbed dramatically since the 1950s, when most Bolivian Indians were illiterate, to about four-fifths of the adult population by the end of the century. The nation's eight state universities are located in each of the departmental capitals except Cobija (capital of Pando department), and there are numerous private schools, including a Roman Catholic university. The largest institutions of higher learning are the University of San Andrés (founded 1930) in La Paz and Major University of San Simón (1832) in Cochabamba.

      There are three levels of health services: those supported by the state through the Ministry of Public Health and Social Security, those provided by the social security system for its affiliates, and private clinics. In general, medical services and hospitals are adequate in the cities but not in rural areas, where doctors and nurses are scarce but respiratory diseases and malnutrition are common. Traveling health workers provide care in colonization zones (the Valles and Oriente), where diseases such as malaria and the deadly Chagas disease (Chagas' disease) (which is carried by the vinchuca bug) are major problems. Several foreign aid organizations have helped institute programs to reduce the infant mortality rate, which is still among the highest on the continent, and provide basic care to rural and poor communities. Folk medicine thrives in some rural areas, such as the Kallawaya Indian communities of the Apolobamba range.

Cultural life

Traditional culture
      Bolivian society embraces a mixture of diverse and extraordinarily rich native Indian cultures as well as the Iberian culture brought by the Spaniards. On religious feast days, for example, pre-Columbian rites are practiced in conjunction with Roman Catholic celebrations, and Aymara, Quechua, and other ethnic groups express themselves through dances and songs that blend indigenous and European influences. During such festivities, symbolic dress shows the Indian interpretation of European attitudes: the dance of the palla-palla caricatures the 16th-century Spanish invaders, the dance of the waka-tokoris satirizes bullfights, and the morenada mocks white men, who are depicted leading imported African slaves. Some highly embroidered and colourful costumes imitate pre-Columbian dress. Many costumes are accompanied by elaborate masks made of plaster, cloth, or tin cans and topped by feather headdresses. The mixture of cultures is also revealed in the music and in the charango, a hybrid instrument that is similar in shape to a guitar, although much smaller; its five double strings resonate on a sound box made from an armadillo shell or a gourd. Other common instruments are the zampoña (panpipes), quena (kena; a notched vertical flute), and percussion instruments of various sizes, including skin drums, bronze gongs, and copper bells. In the lowlands of Santa Cruz and Beni departments, music composed in the 18th century—during the heyday of the Jesuit missions in Latin America—is performed by Guaraní Indians of the Guarayo, Chiquitano, and Mojeno communities.

      Highland Indian women in both urban and rural areas still wear traditional multilayered skirts (polleras) and colourful shawls. The shawls may be stuffed with goods being taken to market or with fresh purchases, extra clothing, and a baby, all in a carefully balanced bundle on the back, leaving both hands free. Hats always complete the outfit, their dozens of shapes varying with the different regions of Bolivia and with the marital status of the wearers; for example, in the Quechua town of Tarabuco (near Sucre), single women wear woolen hats, whereas married women don leather hats of a completely different style.

      Indians long attempted to imitate Europeans, in custom as well as in dress. However, beginning in the 1940s and especially since the early '70s, Indian culture and values have been reestablished: traditional music has risen to a higher standard, painters have abandoned the imitation of European fashions, and some of the characteristics of Indian culture have reemerged in the general lifestyle.

Daily life
      Bolivian daily life is largely dependent on social class, economic status, and place of residence. Whereas Indian traditions persist throughout the nation, they are more strongly pronounced in rural and working-class areas. Most members of the middle and upper classes, however, tend to aspire toward “modern” or Western cultural ideals in their choices of music, clothing, daily entertainment, reading material, and visual arts, in spite of the increasing amount of respect and interest garnered by indigenous art forms.

      Television antennas dot the urban landscape, and televisions and long-distance telephone service are now also found in many rural communities. Because of the high cost of fixed phone service, Bolivians from all walks of life are making use of cellular phones—from Aymara market vendors in La Paz to truck drivers in Cochabamba. Middle- and upper-class households, especially those in the cities, are far more likely to own telephones and computers and to enjoy the offerings of mass culture, from Internet cafés and flashy discotheques to satellite and cable TV programming (including telenovelas [soap operas], game shows, and news) and a wider variety of food, clothing, and public transportation. These enticements are partly responsible for rural-to-urban migration among younger Bolivian adults. The reality of life for the urban poor, however, is far from the ideal.

      People in the tropical lowlands generally attend more social gatherings and stay out later than residents of the highlands, where restaurants and clubs tend to close earlier because of the chilly evening temperatures. Shopping is largely defined by social standing: the middle and upper classes shop in malls and supermarkets in wealthier neighbourhoods, whereas lower-income residents save money by visiting open markets. However, members of all social classes visit black market areas, which are found in most Bolivian cities; there they can purchase everything from music recordings to computers and cellular phones.

The arts
      The combination of Indian and European cultural influences in Bolivia has produced a thriving artistic community, and Bolivians have gained prominence in painting, sculpture, classical and traditional music, and folk dancing. Numerous theatres and art galleries in the major cities provide examples of traditional Bolivian music and art. The most prominent museums are the National Museum of Art (1964) and the National Museum of Archaeology (1846), both in La Paz, and the Casa de Moneda National Museum (1938) in Potosí. On La Paz's Calle Jaen are the Casa de Murillo ethnographic museum (1950) and other small museums exhibiting traditional gold, silver, and textile art. Jewelry in silver and gold, with pre-Columbian decorations and styles, has been made in Bolivia for centuries, and the local markets offer a profusion of colourful handicrafts and fine wood carvings.

      Various exhibits, conferences, and lectures are organized at the Bolivian American Centre, L'Alliance Française (a French cultural institute), the British Council, the Goethe Institute, and the Casa de España (Spanish Institute) of Santa Cruz. The nation's most extensive library holdings are at the University of San Andrés, and there is a smaller collection at the National Library of Congress. The National Archives are in Sucre. The National Symphony Orchestra in La Paz offers regular performances and special concerts for children and for residents of the less developed areas of the city. Choral and native dance groups are found throughout the nation. Educational centres for children include the Kusillo Children's Museum in La Paz and the Tanga Tanga Children's Museum in Sucre.

      The dozens of Roman Catholic churches and cathedrals, mostly dating from colonial times, constitute a national architectural treasure. They are generally ornamented in an extravagant Baroque style, although some are in Renaissance (e.g., the Cathedral of La Paz) or later styles. The church has supported the restoration and revival of several Jesuit mission churches in the lowlands of the Oriente. In the city of Potosí stands the impressive Casa de Moneda (Treasury House, or Royal Mint), which produced coins for Spain's American colonies. Under Spanish direction the city's inhabitants built numerous churches that were decorated with exquisite gold-leaf altars, paintings, and frescoes. Potosí, which is one of the few cities in Bolivia to retain its colonial architectural character, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1987.

Sports and recreation
      No other sport in Bolivia approaches the popularity of soccer (association football), and the nation has occasionally gained international recognition for soccer, particularly after their national team placed second at the 1997 South American Championship (Copa America). For decades, separate women's and men's games have been played in communities throughout the country, and each city has soccer clubs with devoted fans. Clubs for horseback riding, golf, and tennis offer a variety of activities to the country's growing middle and upper classes. The cities of La Paz, Cochabamba, and Santa Cruz have professional-quality golf courses, including one on the outskirts of La Paz at an elevation of 11,000 feet (3,350 metres). Bicycle and automobile racing are also popular, as are volleyball and basketball; bullfighting has a small following. Bolivian boxers have won Latin American championships, but there are few other indoor sports in the nation, because of a lack of facilities.

      The most important folk festival is held in Oruro during the carnival holidays preceding Lent; many Indian musical and dance groups compete, providing a magnificent display of costumes and decorations. Also during Carnival, Santa Cruz is transformed into a frenzy of dancing, drinking, and celebration as tens of thousands of residents and visitors take part in dance ensembles. Among the religious events is the Great Power (Gran Poder) festival in La Paz during May and the celebration of the Virgin of Urkupina in Cochabamba. Potosí, Tarija, Sucre, and the former Jesuit missions in Santa Cruz and Beni also hold large festivals.

Press and telecommunications
      Bolivia has an active and constitutionally free press, which has been subject to periodic censorship during dictatorial regimes. Each of the departmental capitals except Cobija (in Pando) has at least one daily newspaper. The principal newspapers are El Diario, which is the nation's oldest; Presencia, published by the Roman Catholic church; La Razón, Última Hora, and La Prensa, all printed in La Paz; El Deber, El Mundo, and El Nuevo Día, in Santa Cruz; and Los Tiempos and La Opinión, in Cochabamba. The Bolivian Times is an English-language magazine published weekly. Newspapers and other publications are quickly distributed by air services, keeping far-flung population clusters informed of national affairs. Many Bolivian periodicals are available on the Internet, which is used increasingly by Bolivian businesses, students, and professionals as a communications and educational tool. Internet cafés have also become popular leisure-time venues and have sprung up in most of the major cities.

      Commercial television and radio stations have proliferated in Bolivia; they broadcast mainly in Spanish, although there are several programs in Aymara and Quechua. The privately owned ATB Television Network is now the country's primary television network, but it competes with several other Bolivian networks and independent television stations. The state-owned National Television Company reaches most Bolivian cities and towns; it covers national and world events, sports, and the arts and also offers documentaries and general entertainment. Middle-class neighbourhoods and hotels in major cities also have access to cable television service with programs from other Latin American countries, Europe, and the United States. Ownership of television sets rose dramatically in the last decades of the 20th century.

      Entel, the formerly state-owned telecommunications company, was taken over by Italian investors in the 1990s, whereupon it began modernizing the country's long-distance communications services, laying a network of fiber-optic cables and introducing digital cellular phone networks. Telecel is another cellular phone provider.

Peter J. McFarren

History
      The following discussion focuses on events in Bolivia since the time of European conquest. For events in a regional context, see Latin America, history of, and, for in-depth treatment of events prior to the conquest, see pre-Columbian civilizations: Andean civilization (pre-Columbian civilizations).

Early period
      Bolivian society traces its origins to the advanced pre-Columbian civilizations of South America. The high Bolivian plateau known as the Altiplano was already densely populated several centuries before the Spanish conquest in the 16th century.

      From the 7th century the Tiwanaku (Tiahuanaco) empire, the first of the great Andean empires to extend over both the Peruvian coast and highlands, had its centre in the Altiplano region. By the 11th century it had reached its apogee and was replaced by simpler regional states.

      In the centuries that followed the collapse of Tiwanaku, the Bolivian highland region maintained its dense populations with irrigation agriculture. By the 15th century the region was controlled largely by some 12 groups of Aymara-speaking (Aymaran languages) Indians (Aymara); they, in turn, fell under the control of the expanding Inca empire (Inca), which had its capital in Cuzco (now in Peru). Because the Aymara were the largest and most prominent non-Quechua-speaking group in the empire, they were allowed to retain their language and ethnic identity under Inca rule. However, large numbers of Quechua speakers were relocated to Aymara territories as part of a deliberate Incan policy of colonization. It was this early pattern of colonization and nonassimilation that gave Bolivia its current linguistic and ethnic makeup: Quechua and Aymara are still the two major Indian languages in Bolivia.

      Soon after the Spanish conquest of the Inca empire in the early 16th century, much of the Indian population of Bolivia was forced to labour in mines established by the Spaniards. Notable among these were those exploiting the newly discovered (1545) silver deposits of Potosí—the largest silver mines then known in the Western world. The arid, high-altitude mines of Potosí, along with others discovered near the town of Oruro (founded in 1606), were supplied with food and other basic necessities by such towns as Chuquisaca (1538; now Sucre), La Paz (1548), and Cochabamba (1571). From the 16th to the 18th century this central Andean area, known then as Charcas or Upper Peru, was one of the wealthiest and most densely populated centres of the Spanish empire. Its mines were supplied with mitas (repartimiento) (conscripted groups) of Indian labourers from throughout the Andes, and by the mid-17th century Potosí's population had reached some 160,000—a size comparable to that of the largest cities of Europe. This region fell into decay by the last quarter of the 18th century, however, largely because the richest and most accessible veins were exhausted.

      Although Potosí continued to be Upper Peru's most important economic centre, even after mining had declined, Chuquisaca was the intellectual and political focus of the area. Chuquisaca (also known, in the colonial period, as Charcas and La Plata and, since independence, as Sucre) served as the seat of Upper Peru's government, which was known from its foundation in 1559 as the Audiencia of Charcas. The audiencia was first placed under the Viceroyalty of Peru (Peru, Viceroyalty of) at Lima, but in 1776 it was finally shifted to the new Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata (Río de la Plata, Viceroyalty of the) established at Buenos Aires (now in Argentina). With its academies and universities, Chuquisaca was the major educational centre for the entire Río de la Plata region.

      In the late 1770s and early '80s, Indians in the highlands took part in widespread uprisings, most notably the revolt of Tupac Amaru II, which was carried out in the hope of reestablishing the Inca empire. These actions caused many casualties, and La Paz was besieged twice for several months, but eventually the rebel leaders were defeated and executed.

      In 1809 Chuquisaca and La Paz became two of the earliest cities to rebel against the colonial government appointed by the new Napoleonic ruler of Spain. Many historians have considered this action to be the beginning of the wars of independence in Latin America. Although viceregal authorities in Lima quickly put down the rebellions, similar uprisings were successful in the viceregal capital of Buenos Aires. From that city several revolutionary armies were dispatched without success to liberate Upper Peru; however, the guerrilla units formed in the rugged countryside of Upper Peru kept the revolutionary movements alive for some 16 years. In 1825 an army under the leadership of Marshal Antonio José de Sucre (Sucre, Antonio José de) liberated Upper Peru with the aid of defecting royalists, who were mostly Creole elites. The defectors convinced Simón Bolívar (Bolívar, Simón) and Sucre to allow autonomy for Upper Peru rather than union with either Peru or Argentina, and on August 6, 1825, an Upper Peruvian congress declared the country independent. Few of the guerrilla commanders, representing a more humble constituency, were able to become part of the Creole elite-led government.

Bolivia from 1825 to c. 1930
      In recognition of Bolívar's support, congressional leaders named the new republic Bolivia in his honour, and they invited Sucre, his chief aide, to be the first president.

Foundation and early national period
      The new republic was not as viable as its leaders had fervently hoped it would be. Its economic growth was retarded, despite the region's immense mineral wealth and its historical prominence, because the decline in mining during the 18th century had given way to severe depression resulting from the wars of independence. Between 1803 and 1825 silver production at Potosí declined by more than 80 percent, and, by the time the first national census was taken in 1846, the republic listed more than 10,000 abandoned mines.

      Bolivia became known as one of the more backward of the new republics. It rapidly lost its economic standing within Spanish America to such previously marginal areas as the Río de la Plata region and Chile, which were forging ahead on the basis of meat and cereal production. Bolivia, on the other hand, was a net importer of basic foods, even those consumed exclusively by its Indian population. The Bolivian republic, with little trade to tax and few resources to export, instead relied on direct taxation of its Indian peasant masses, who made up more than two-thirds of the estimated 1,100,000 population in 1825. This regressive form of taxation was a major source of revenue until the last quarter of the 19th century.

      Economic decline was mirrored by political conflicts and a disregard for democratic principles. Bolivia emerged with a series of military strongmen (caudillos), among whom was Marshal Andrés de Santa Cruz, president in 1829–39. Santa Cruz temporarily reorganized state finances in an effort to repair the war-torn economy, and he pursued policies of territorial expansion. In the 1830s he overthrew the Lima regime of General Agustín Gamarra and united Bolivia and Peru into a short-lived government known as the Confederation (1836–39). A combined force of Chileans and nationalistic Peruvians destroyed the Confederation, however, and Bolivia quickly turned in upon itself, abandoning further thoughts of regional dominance.

      Over the next half-century the Bolivian government attempted to bring its own far-flung regions under centralized control, but Bolivia lacked the population and resources necessary to exploit its Amazonian and Pacific frontiers. Despite the enormous wealth in nitrates (notably saltpetre and guano) on the Bolivian Pacific coast, the country proved incapable of mining them, even with the help of foreign capital, mainly because Bolivia's upper class remained committed to mining on the Altiplano. Instead, the nitrates were exploited by Peruvian, Chilean, North American, and British companies, and disputes over the taxation of exports led to the War of the Pacific (Pacific, War of the).

Loss of the coastal region
      From the 1840s, heavy Anglo-Chilean investments were made in nitrate mining on the Bolivian coast, beginning with the extraction of guano from the shoreline of Atacama province. Chile increasingly pressed territorial claims and obtained commercial concessions within Bolivia after nitrate deposits were discovered farther inland in the 1860s. Bolivia, responding to this pressure, signed a secret defense pact with Peru in 1873. The following year Bolivian-Chilean relations improved with a revised commercial treaty, but in 1878 the Bolivian government undermined the treaty by attempting to increase taxes on the Chilean-owned Compañía de Salitre (Saltpetre Company) operating in Bolivia, and tensions quickly escalated. Chilean forces occupied Antofagasta in February 1879 and quickly consolidated their hold on the surrounding Bolivian territory. Official declarations of war soon followed. In May 1880 Chilean forces landed at Ilo and Pacocha (both in Peru) and marched south, defeating a combined Bolivian-Peruvian army at the Battle of Tacna; the fall of Arica the next month signaled the end of effective resistance in the area. Rather than attacking directly inland through the treacherous Andes Mountains, the Chileans ignored Bolivia for the rest of the war and proceeded on an invasion of Peru, which resulted in their eventual capture of Lima and Arequipa.

      The fall of the Pacific littoral to Chile may, in many ways, have been a blessing for Bolivia, as the defeats in 1880 marked a major turning point in national political history. Since the destruction of the Confederation, Bolivia had gone through one of the worst periods of 19th-century caudillo rule in all of Latin America. However, during the 1860s and '70s, Andean silver mining had revived, as capital investments were made by Chilean and British investors; the international market for silver had also improved, and new technology was introduced. These conditions created substantial wealth for the mining elite, and, when barracks officers were discredited by the War of the Pacific, the new mining entrepreneurs captured political control of the country.

Formation of Liberal and Conservative parties
      Starting with the presidency (1880–84) of Narciso Campero, Bolivia moved into an era of civilian government. The country's upper classes divided their support between two parties—Liberal and Conservative— and then proceeded to share power through them. This intraclass political party system finally brought Bolivia the stability it needed for economic development: though the parties split on issues such as anticlericalism, they were identical in their desire to promote economic growth. For two decades the country was ruled by the Conservatives, whose principal goal was to encourage the mining industry by developing an international rail network.

      The Liberals thus inherited an economically expanding country when they seized power from the Conservatives in the so-called Federal Revolution of 1899. This revolt was supposedly instigated by those wishing to move the institutions of national government from Sucre (formerly Chuquisaca) to La Paz, but in reality it was primarily a power struggle between the Conservative and Liberal parties. Unfortunately for the Conservatives, their strength was too closely tied to the traditional Chuquisaca elite, much of which was identical to the silver-mining class. The Liberals, however, had the bulk of their strength in La Paz, which by this period was three times the size of Sucre and had the largest urban concentration—some 72,000 persons in a country of 1,700,000.

Increase in tin mining
      The Liberal victory was also closely associated with a basic shift in the Altiplano mining economy. As the world silver market began to decline in the 1880s and early '90s, mining operations began shifting to tin, which is found in association with silver, because tin was suddenly in demand by all the major industrialized countries. By 1900 tin completely superseded silver as Bolivia's primary export, accounting for more than half of export earnings.

      The shift to tin mining brought about a basic change within the Bolivian capitalist class. Whereas the silver-mining elite had been almost exclusively Bolivian, the new tin miners were far more cosmopolitan, including, in the early years, foreigners of all nationalities as well as some new Bolivian entrepreneurs. Tin mining itself absorbed far more capital and produced far more wealth than had the old silver-mining industry, and the new companies that emerged became complex international ventures directed by professional managers.

      Given this new economic complexity and the political stability already achieved by the Conservatives and perpetuated by the Liberals, the tin-mining elite found it profitable to withdraw from direct involvement in national political life. Whereas Bolivian presidents under Conservative rule in the 19th century had been either silver magnates themselves (Gregorio Pacheco, 1884–88; Aniceto Arce, 1888–92) or closely associated with such magnates as partners or representatives (Mariano Baptista, 1892–96; Severo Fernández Alonso, 1896–99), the Liberals and subsequent 20th-century presidents were largely outside the mining elite. No tin magnate actively participated in leadership positions within the political system. Rather, they came to rely on a more effective system of pressure group politics.

Liberal rule, 1899–1920
      The primary tasks of the Liberal politicians, who ruled Bolivia until 1920 under the leadership of Ismael Montes (twice president: in 1904–08 and 1913–17), were to settle Bolivia's chronic border problems and to expand the communications network initiated by the Conservatives. In 1904 a definitive peace treaty was signed with Chile, accepting the loss of all Bolivia's former coastal territories. Also, a dispute with Brazil known as the Acre problem was resolved: this had involved an unsuccessful attempt by the central government to crush an autonomist rebellion (1889–1903) in the rubber-boom territory of Acre on the Brazilian border. Brazil's covert support of the rebels and the defeat of Bolivian forces finally convinced the Liberals to sell the territory to Brazil in the Treaty of Petrópolis (1903). As a result of the financial indemnities provided by both treaties, Bolivia was able to finance a great era of railroad construction. By 1920 most of the major cities were linked by rail, and La Paz was connected to the two Chilean Pacific ports of Antofagasta and Arica; new lines had been begun or completed to Lake Titicaca, and thus to the Peruvian border, and to Tarija and the Argentine frontier.

      The period of Liberal rule under President Montes was also the calmest in Bolivian political history, and the Liberals' success led to the total collapse of the Conservative Party. Not until 1914 was an effective two-party system again established, when many of those outside of politics, along with a large number of new and younger elements, finally organized the Republican Party. Like its predecessors, the Republican Party was a white, upper- and middle-class grouping, with a fundamental belief in liberal and positivist ideologies.

The Republican Party
      The abrasive quality of the strong-willed Montes and the disintegration of the ruling Liberal Party finally permitted the Republicans to stage a successful coup d'état in 1920 and become the ruling party. Upon achieving political power, however, the new party immediately split into two warring sections based on a personality conflict between two Montes-style politicians—Juan Bautista Saavedra, a La Paz lawyer who captured control of the Republican Party's junta in 1920 and was national president from 1921 to 1925, and Daniel Salamanca, a Cochabamba landowner who took his following into a separate party, the so-called Genuine Republican Party, which was often supported in its activities by the Liberals. The rivalry between these two men became the dominant theme in Bolivian politics for the next decade, until the Salamanca forces captured the presidency.

      Below the surface of this political battle of personalities, the national economy in the 1920s was undergoing serious change. A brilliant post-World War I recovery in the Bolivian tin-mining industry in the early years of the decade led by 1929 to the industry's highest production figures. This enormous output occurred, however, in a period of steady price decline (a trend that continued long after the Great Depression of the 1930s). By 1930 the international tin market was in serious crisis, and Bolivian production suffered. The year 1930 also marked the end of major new capital investment in Bolivian tin mining; thereafter production costs rose higher and lower-grade ores were more often produced.

Bolivia from 1930 to c. 1980
      The installation of Salamanca in the presidency after the revolt of 1930 seemingly involved little change in traditional Bolivian government. But because the Great Depression cut brutally into national income and forced a large part of the vital mining industry to close, Salamanca was forced to take new measures. When he attempted to manipulate the inflation rate, however, he ran into bitter hostility from the Liberal Party, which had been his key partner in the 1930 overthrow of the regular Republican Party. The conflict between these two forces in the central government led to a tense political climate, and Salamanca was forced to accept a Liberal veto over internal economic decisions. He refused, nevertheless, to permit the Liberals to join his cabinet; rather, he sought to overcome Liberal congressional control and to weaken growing strike movements by turning national attention to other themes. To this end, Salamanca had available the traditional recourse to patriotism and foreign war in the form of a long-standing border conflict with Paraguay.

      In the mid-1920s Bolivia and Paraguay had each begun a major program of fort construction in the largely uninhabited and poorly demarcated Chaco Boreal territory on Bolivia's southeastern frontier. At the height of the Depression, Salamanca advocated an even heavier armament and fortification program and secured major European loans. A border incident developed between the two states in June 1932, and Salamanca deliberately provoked a full-scale Bolivian reprisal, which led to open war between the two countries.

The Chaco War and military rule
 The Chaco War was a long and costly disaster for Bolivia. In three years of bitter fighting on its southeastern frontiers, Bolivia sustained some 57,000 deaths, and it lost far more territory than Paraguay had claimed even in its most extreme prewar demands. The fact that Bolivia had entered the war with a better equipped and supposedly far better trained army only aggravated the sense of frustration among the younger literate veterans—the so-called Chaco generation—at the total failure of Bolivian arms. Charging that the traditional politicians and the international oil companies had led Bolivia into its disastrous war, the returning veterans set up rival socialist and radical parties and challenged the traditional political system.

      The initial result of this challenge was the overthrow of civilian rule and the first military government in Bolivia since 1880. In 1936 the younger army officers seized the government, and, under the leadership of Colonel David Toro in 1936–37 and Major Germán Busch in 1937–39, they tried to reform Bolivian society. During this so-called era of military socialism the Standard Oil Company (Exxon Corporation) holdings were confiscated, an important labour code was created, and an advanced, socially oriented constitution was written in 1938; yet little else was changed.

The rise of new political groups and the Bolivian National Revolution
      Civilian dissident groups finally began to organize themselves into powerful national opposition parties in the 1940s. The two most important of these were the middle-class and initially fascist-oriented Nationalist Revolutionary Movement (Movimiento Nacionalista Revolucionario; MNR) and the Marxist and largely pro-Soviet Party of the Revolutionary Left (Partido de la Izquierda Revolucionaria; PIR). Both groups established important factions in the national congress of 1940–44. In 1943 the civilian president General Enrique Peñaranda was overthrown by a secret military group, Reason for the Fatherland (Razón de Patria; RADEPA). RADEPA allied itself with the MNR and tried to create a new-style government under Colonel Gualberto Villaroel (1943–46), but little was accomplished except for the MNR's political mobilization of the Indian peasants. Opposed as fascist-oriented by the right and left, the Villaroel government was overthrown in 1946 in a bloody revolution in which Villaroel was hanged in front of the presidential palace.

      During the next few years the PIR tried to rule in alliance with many of the older parties but failed. It was eventually dissolved and replaced in early 1950 by the more radical Bolivian Communist Party; meanwhile, the more conservative parties proved unable to tame their rivals (communism). After the MNR won a plurality victory in the presidential elections of 1951, the military intervened directly and formed a junta government. The MNR's disaster under Villaroel led the party to dissociate itself from its fascist wing; instead, it forged an alliance with a small Trotskyite party that had important mine-union support. The alliance brought the labour leader Juan Lechín into the MNR. After several unsuccessful revolts, each more violent than the preceding one, the MNR finally overthrew the military regime in April 1952. During this struggle armed workers, civilians, and peasants almost totally destroyed the army.

      April 1952 thus marks the beginning of the so-called Bolivian National Revolution, which became one of Latin America's most influential social upheavals. That year, universal suffrage was granted with the abolition of literacy requirements. Moreover, the MNR and its mine-worker and peasant supporters were pledged to a fundamental attack on the tin-mining elite and its allied political supporters. In October 1952 the three largest tin-mining companies were nationalized, and one of the most far-reaching land-reform (land reform) decrees ever enacted in the Western Hemisphere came into effect in August 1953. Not only were Indians granted land, freed from servile labour obligations, and granted the right to vote, but they were also given large supplies of arms. From that point on, the Indian peasants of Bolivia became a powerful, if largely passive, political force upon which all subsequent governments based their strength.

Post-1952 regimes
      The most important leader of the MNR, Víctor Paz Estenssoro (Paz Estenssoro, Víctor), was president of Bolivia in 1952–56 and instituted the most revolutionary part of the party's program. In 1956 he was replaced by the more conservative Hernando (Hernán) Siles Zuazo, whose primary concern was to stop inflation, which had completed the revolutionary process by virtually destroying the older middle-class supporters of the MNR. Siles initiated an economic program, with massive financial support from the United States, that brought inflation under control; at the same time, he also suspended most of the advanced social programs of the revolution. The government ended worker coadministration of the nationalized mine companies and cut back on social services. It also invited North American petroleum companies back into Bolivia for the first time since 1937, when Standard Oil of Bolivia had been confiscated by the Toro government.

      When Paz Estenssoro returned to the presidency in 1960, he further consolidated the achievements of Siles and revived, with U.S. support, the power of the army. Paz Estenssoro's attempt in 1964 to renew his presidential term for another four years splintered and temporarily destroyed the MNR, however, and the military overthrew his government.

Return to military rule
      With the support of many conservatives and the peasant masses, the vice president, General René Barrientos, seized the government and proceeded to dissolve most of the organized labour opposition, marking the beginning of a string of military leaders. From 1964 until his death in 1969, Barrientos continued with the process of conservative economic reform and political retrenchment, and he attempted to demobilize all popular groups except the peasants, who had gained some power as a result of the National Revolution. Partly because of that empowerment, the Argentine-born Cuban revolutionary Che Guevara (Guevara, Che) failed to mobilize peasants in a remote region of the country, and in 1967 his poorly organized guerrillas were destroyed by units of the Bolivian Armed Forces, who had been trained by the U.S. military and supported by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.

      The death of Barrientos in early 1969 brought the vice president, Luis Adolfo Siles Salinas, into office; he was forcibly replaced in midyear by General Alfredo Ovando Candía, who nationalized Gulf Oil Company holdings. Ovando was in turn forced out of office in October 1970 by the more radical General Juan José Torres. Of the several military regimes that governed between 1964 and 1979, that led by Torres was the most radical; for a time the Torres government replaced Congress with a workers' soviet. In 1971 Torres was replaced by Col. Hugo Banzer Suárez (Bánzer Suárez, Hugo), and the most repressive regime of the period came to power. During the next seven years the government suppressed the labour movement, sent troops to occupy the mines, suspended all civil rights, and prohibited the peasant syndicates. Nevertheless, this was also an era of unprecedented economic growth in Bolivia, fueled by a sudden increase in world mineral prices and the completion of some of the basic social and economic changes that had begun with the National Revolution of 1952. Paramount among these changes were the relative decline of the importance of tin and the emergence of commercial agricultural exports for the first time in Bolivian republican history. It was also a period when the national population increased rapidly, achieving between 1950 and 1976 an annual net growth rate of 2.1 percent. Finally, the Banzer regime was unique in contemporary Bolivian affairs because it gave national representation to the new commercial agricultural interests of the Santa Cruz region.

Bolivia from c. 1980 to 2000
Transition to civilian rule
      Between 1978 and 1982 there were 10 governments in Bolivia, including several periods of military rule. The old MNR reemerged in 1978, and a complex set of new political parties and movements developed. These new groups gained wide support in the national elections of 1978 and 1979, and the electorate showed an even balance between conservative and radical positions. Moreover, peasants for the first time no longer voted as a bloc but were as equally divided as the urban populace.

      Popular opposition had forced Banzer to call elections in 1978, which were subsequently voided in the wake of charges of fraud, and Banzer resigned under threat of a coup. Walter Guevara Arce was elected president by Congress in August 1979, but he stepped down in November after a failed coup, whereupon Lidia Gueiler Tejada was chosen by military, political, and union leaders to serve as interim president, becoming the first woman to hold the country's highest office. In July 1980, before Congress could choose a new president, the military staged a bloody coup, during which one of the country's most acclaimed authors and political leaders, Marcelo Quiroga Santa Cruz, was murdered. Over the next 13 months an extremist military government led by General Luis García Meza committed widespread murders, incidents of torture, forced exiles, and political persecution. The government hired militant fascists (including ex-Nazis) and other paramilitary groups to attack opposition political and labour leaders, and corruption was widespread among military officers.

      The new regime immediately lost credibility in the international community because of its repressive measures and because U.S. officials implicated some of its leaders in illegal cocaine trafficking; because of these illicit ties, García Meza's coup has become known as the “cocaine coup.” Years later Luis Arce Gómez, who had served as minister of the interior under García Meza, was convicted in Miami, Florida, on cocaine trafficking charges, and in 1995 García Meza himself was extradited to Bolivia from Brazil and convicted.

Restoration of civilian government
      García Meza resigned in August 1981, faced with widespread opposition, domestic and international condemnation, and a deteriorating economy. Congress was reinstated, and in 1982 it returned Hernando Siles Zuazo to the presidency; Jaime Paz Zamora became vice president. During the next year Siles wrestled with disagreements within the ruling government coalition, heavy deficits incurred by the state mining company Comibol, and social unrest, all of which contributed to the collapse of the economy and a breakup of the ruling coalition. When Siles stepped down in 1985, a year before the expiration of his term, hyperinflation was at unprecedented levels, the economy was in shambles with banks virtually shut down, state mines were suffering enormous losses, and the industrial sector was at the edge of collapse. In addition, unusually strong El Niño weather patterns caused disastrous crop failures. With the legitimate economy failing, cocaine trafficking became a major source of foreign exchange; the government, because of its lack of resources and the strong opposition it faced from coca leaf farmers, was unable to curtail the trafficking. Despite all his government's failings, however, his main legacy was to turn over power to a democratically elected president.

      In the peaceful elections of 1985 the Nationalist Democratic Action (Acción Democrática Nacionalista; ADN), led by Banzer, narrowly edged out Paz Estenssoro's party, the MNR, but, with the acquiescence of Banzer, Paz Estenssoro was elected president by Congress. The new president implemented drastic economic reforms to end the country's hyperinflation, which by then was the highest in the world. He greatly devalued the Bolivian peso while increasing gasoline prices, freezing wages, and eliminating price supports. The country's conservative government also shut down most of its tin mines and laid off some four-fifths of the miners in response to a sharp drop in international tin prices and Comibol's large deficits. To quell a general strike and the mobilization of miners, the government temporarily sent dozens of labour leaders to detention centres in the Bolivian tropics. Overall, however, there was little actual violence, despite the tremendous social and economic upheaval caused by the economic reform programs. To carry out the economic reforms, Paz Estenssoro formed an alliance with General Banzer and his party. During this period Paz Estenssoro dismantled the state mining company, which he had helped set up after the 1952 revolution, and he opened up the economy to foreign investors.

      The new president held to his plan in the face of public pressure, and after several months the Bolivian economy began to recover, as its ruinous hyperinflation rate was reduced. Although this was an encouraging step, Bolivia still faced numerous debilitating problems, particularly unemployment; under an emergency employment program, work was provided for tens of thousands of unemployed miners.

      The government's difficult fight against the large underground cocaine economy was somewhat strengthened, partly as a result of pressure from the United States. Actions taken—with the aid of U.S. troops and helicopters—included the eradication of illegal crops and processing laboratories and the implementation of a program of crop substitution.

      In the May 1989 presidential elections the main candidates were Banzer, Paz Zamora, and Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada Bustamente, a newcomer to national politics. Sánchez de Lozada, a philosophy graduate of the University of Chicago and owner of the profitable COMSUR mining company, had assisted with the economic reforms in 1985 under Paz Estenssoro. Sánchez de Lozada and the MNR came in first in the popular vote but did not receive an absolute majority, whereupon Congress again selected the president. Paz Zamora, with his Movement of the Revolutionary Left (Movimiento de la Izquierda Revolucionaria; MIR), unexpectedly secured the presidency by forming a coalition government with Banzer's ADN. In most respects, Paz Zamora continued his predecessor's policies, except for a new emphasis on national production of food and raw materials and negotiations with Brazil on the construction of a natural gas pipeline. Under the threat of losing U.S. aid, Paz Zamora also continued to help fight the drug trade.

      In the 1993 presidential election, Sánchez de Lozada and the MNR won a plurality, and, in order to ensure his selection by Congress, he formed an alliance with the Solidarity and Civic Union (Unidad Cívica Solidaridad; UCS). Sánchez de Lozada soon initiated a privatization and capitalization program that brought huge amounts of investment capital into the economy. The government sold its controlling interests in electrical energy, transportation, communication, hydrocarbon, and airline companies to foreign partners; the remaining government stake in these companies was transferred to a new national pension fund system. Sánchez de Lozada also finalized an agreement with Brazil for the construction of a major natural gas pipeline (opened in 1999) between Santa Cruz and São Paulo, Brazil, and this undertaking in turn stimulated foreign investment in the petrochemical industry. The reorganization of the pension fund system also removed widespread corruption and inefficiency from the government bureaucracy. Sánchez de Lozada ended his term in 1997 with a growing economy, increased foreign investment, and reduced coca leaf cultivation and drug trafficking.

Charles W. Arnade Peter J. McFarren
      Elections in 1997 gave Banzer a plurality of the vote, and he emerged victorious in the Congressional decision through the support of the UCS and the populist Conscience of Nationhood (Conciencia de Patria; Condepa) party, which was led by Carlos Palenque, a popular radio and television talk-show host. The new government intensified the war on drugs and furthered its predecessors' efforts toward economic development. Banzer resigned before the end of his term, which Vice Pres. Jorge Quiroga completed.

Bolivia in the 21st century
      Sánchez de Lozada won the 2002 presidential elections; however, his term was plagued by a recession and peasant protests. Violence escalated between armed peasants and police in February 2003, resulting in the deaths of 30 people and leading to the temporary toppling of Sánchez de Lozada's government. More protests later that year demanding nationalization of the country's natural gas resources reignited social unrest and brought about even more deaths. Sánchez de Lozada was finally forced to resign in October 2003 and was replaced by Vice Pres. Carlos Mesa Gisbert. Mesa's decision to revise the hydrocarbon law for natural gas deposits did not forestall violent demonstrations, and he, too, resigned.

      On Dec. 18, 2005, amid continuing protests, Juan Evo Morales Ayma (Morales, Evo) was elected as Bolivia's first Indian president. A founder of the left-wing political party Movement Toward Socialism (Movimiento al Socialismo; MAS) and a former coca-growers' union leader, Morales fought for more rights for indigenous communities, for less-harsh restrictions on coca farmers, and for more taxes on the wealthy. In 2006 he nationalized Bolivia's gas fields and oil industry, and in 2007 he announced plans to nationalize the country's railroads and mines. In response to Morales's reforms and his attempts to redistribute wealth in the country, four of Bolivia's wealthier provinces overwhelmingly approved regional autonomy statutes in referenda, though these were not recognized by the central government. There were political demonstrations, some of which turned violent, by those who opposed Morales's reforms and by his supporters. A recall referendum on Morales's leadership was held in August 2008, and two-thirds of those who went to the polls voted for him to continue in office. In another referendum held in January 2009, voters approved a new constitution that would allow Morales to seek a second consecutive five-year term (previously the constitution limited the president to a single term) and give him the power to dissolve Congress. Other changes to the constitution furthered indigenous rights, strengthened state control over the country's natural resources, and enforced a limit on the size of private landholdings. Most Bolivians in the wealthier eastern provinces of the country opposed ratification of the new constitution.

      Under Morales the country remained politically divided between the wealthy provinces and the impoverished indigenous communities. On the other hand, inflation had been brought under control, the economy was growing faster than the regional average, and the Bolivian peso, renamed the boliviano, was stabilized.

Ed.

Additional Reading

General
Comprehensive introductions to Bolivia and its environs include Rex A. Hudson and Dennis M. Hanratty (eds.), Bolivia: A Country Study, 3rd ed. (1991); South American Handbook (annual); Harold Osborne, Bolivia: A Land Divided, 3rd ed. (1964, reprinted 1985); and Peter McFarren (compiler and ed.), An Insider's Guide to Bolivia, 3rd ed. (1992). Further bibliographic information may be found in Gertrude M. Yeager (compiler), Bolivia (1988).

Geography
“Bolivia,” in Preston E. James, C.W. Minkel, and Eileen W. James, Latin America, 5th ed. (1986), pp. 358–376, is a clear, comprehensive survey of Bolivia's geography. See also Ismael Montes de Oca, Geografía y recursos naturales de Bolivia, 3rd ed., corrected and enlarged (1997); Federico E. Ahlfeld, Geografía de Bolivia: geografía física, 2nd ed. (1973); and Alfredo Ayala Z., Geografía general de Bolivia (1978, reissued 1990).Detailed studies of changing land-tenure systems since the Agrarian Reform Act of 1953 include Dwight B. Heath, Charles J. Erasmus, and Hans C. Buechler, Land Reform and Social Revolution in Bolivia (1969); and William J. McEwen, Changing Rural Bolivia (1969; also published as Changing Rural Society: A Study of Communities in Bolivia, 1975). E. Boyd Wennergren and Morris D. Whitaker, The Status of Bolivian Agriculture (1975), analyzes production since 1952.Introductions to the lives of the people include Margaret Joan Anstee, Gate of the Sun: A Prospect of Bolivia (1970); and William Carter, Bolivia: A Profile (1971). Hans C. Buechler and Judith-Maria Buechler, The Bolivian Aymara (1971), is an anthropological study of a community living by Lake Titicaca; and William M. Denevan, The Aboriginal Cultural Geography of the Llanos de Mojos of Bolivia (1966), traces early land use, earthworks, and reclamation projects by Indian communities in Beni. J. Valerie Fifer, “Bolivia's Pioneer Fringe,” Geographical Review, 57(1):1–23 (January 1967), and “The Search for a Series of Small Successes: Frontiers of Settlement in Eastern Bolivia,” Journal of Latin American Studies, 14(2):407–432 (November 1982), examine problems and progress since the 1950s in the colonization zones.Jorge Pando Gutiérrez, Bolivia y el mundo: geografía económica, 2nd ed., 2 vol. (1957), is a dated but useful economic study. Mahmood Ali Ayub and Hideo Hashimoto, The Economics of Tin Mining in Bolivia (1985), is a report published by the World Bank. June Nash, We Eat the Mines and the Mines Eat Us (1979, reissued 1993), combines ethnographic, economic, and political aspects.The Bolivian Times, Bolivia's first English-language weekly magazine, describes traditions and cultural sites. Musical styles, instruments, and dances of the Bolivian highlands are described within their cultural context in Henry Stobart, “Bolivia,” in Dale A. Olsen and Daniel E. Sheehy (eds.), The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, vol. 2, pp. 282–299 (1998). Studies of Bolivian art, architecture, and literature include José de Mesa and Teresa Gisbert, Bolivia: monumentos históricos y arqueológicos (1970), and Holguín y la pintura virreinal en Bolivia, 2nd ed. (1977); Enrique Finot, Historia de la literatura boliviana, 5th ed. (1981); and Peter McFarren (ed.), Masks of the Bolivian Andes (1993).

History
Overviews are provided by Robert Barton, A Short History of the Republic of Bolivia, 2nd ed. (1968); Herbert S. Klein, Bolivia: The Evolution of a Multi-Ethnic Society, 2nd ed. (1992); Charles Arnade, Bolivian History (1984); and Waltraud Queiser Morales, Bolivia: Land of Struggle (1992). Useful articles are found in Dwight B. Heath, Historical Dictionary of Bolivia (1972); and Barbara A. Tenenbaum (ed.), Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, 5 vol. (1996).Comprehensive surveys of Andean archaeology include Louis Baudin, L'Empire socialiste des Inka, (1928), also available in a Spanish translation, El imperio socialista de los Incas, 5th ed. rev. and expanded (1962); John Alden Mason, The Ancient Civilizations of Peru, rev. ed. (1968, reissued 1991); and Luis G. Lumbreras, The Peoples and Cultures of Ancient Peru (1974; originally published in Spanish, 1969). A highly praised reconstruction is Nathan Wachtel, The Vision of the Vanquished: The Spanish Conquest of Peru Through Indian Eyes, 1530–1570 (1977; originally published in French, 1971), also available in a Spanish translation, Los vencidos: los indios del Perú frente a la conquista española (1530–1570) (1976). Gustavo Adolfo Otero, Life in the Spanish Colonies, with Particular Reference to Upper Peru, Now Bolivia (1955; originally published in Spanish, 1942), provides information on the influence of Spanish colonization. Negative and positive approaches to Bolivia's history are represented, respectively, by Alcides Arguedas, Obras completas, vol. 2, Historia (1959), a dated but thorough history of Bolivia; and Carlos Montenegro, Nacionalismo y coloniaje, 6th ed. (1982). The complex reasons for the emergence of a separate independent Bolivia are given in detail by Charles W. Arnade, The Emergence of the Republic of Bolivia (1957, reissued 1970). A political geography that explains Bolivia's land loss is J. Valerie Fifer, Bolivia: Land, Location, and Politics Since 1825 (1972). Herbert S. Klein, Parties and Political Change in Bolivia, 1880–1952 (1969), is a good political history. Augusto Céspedes, El dictador suicida: 40 años de historia de Bolivia, 3rd ed. (1979), provides coverage of the first half of the 1900s.Histories of the Chaco War include David H. Zook, Jr., The Conduct of the Chaco War (1960); and Roberto Querejazu Calvo, Masamaclay, 4th ed. (1981).A basic introduction to the Bolivian National Revolution is Robert J. Alexander, The Bolivian National Revolution (1958, reprinted 1974); while James Dunkerley, Rebellion in the Veins: Political Struggle in Bolivia, 1952–82 (1984), is more detailed. James M. Malloy, Bolivia: The Uncompleted Revolution (1970); and James M. Malloy and Eduardo Gamarra, Revolution and Reaction: Bolivia, 1964–1985 (1988), are penetrating analyses. A history and negative evaluation of the populist rule of the MNR is offered in Christopher Mitchell, The Legacy of Populism in Bolivia: From the MNR to Military Rule (1977). The consequences of the revolution are studied by Jonathan Kelley and Herbert S. Klein, Revolution and the Rebirth of Inequality (1981); and Jerry R. Ladman (ed.), Modern-Day Bolivia: Legacy of the Revolution and Prospects for the Future (1982). Frederick B. Pike, The United States and the Andean Republics: Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador (1977), treats diplomatic relations. Carlos D. Mesa Gisbert, Presidentes de Bolivia, 2nd ed. (1990), discusses the nation's political leaders and their effects on Bolivian life.Peter J. McFarren

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