Review of Coca Yes; Cocaine No: How Bolivia’s Coca Growers Reinvented Democracy
European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies
Revista Europea de Estudios Latinoamericanos y del Caribe
107 (2019): January-June, book review 9
www.erlacs.org
Book Review
– Coca Yes; Cocaine No: How Bolivia’s Coca Growers Reinvented
Democracy, by Thomas Grisaffi, Duke University Press, 2018
In this vivid ethnographic account, Grisaffi shows how Bolivian coca growers
grew from a criminalized union to a strong social movement with a vernacular
vision of “radical democracy”. They hoped their form of social control could
be scaled up to the national level when the leader of the coca growers union,
Evo Morales, was elected as Bolivia’s first indigenous president. Yet, this hope
faded as Morales enacted a liberal state. Grisaffi makes clear his goal is not to
highlight the illegal activities of the coca growers, but to “theorize the
contradictions in Bolivia’s claim to be an indigenous-led and grassrootsoriented, democracy” (p. 3). To do so, he investigates what happens when
vernacular forms of democracy become institutionalized, tracing how an
agrarian union criminalized by international drug policies becomes a ruling
governing party. This fascinating case study shows that the conditions for
realization of alternative democracies locally are always linked to broader
political economic forces.
The introduction places this drama in the context of the Andean Drug War.
Over the last 50 years, the United States and its allies have poured millions of
dollars into this war, pairing militarization with a policy of forced eradication.
Unlike Peru and Colombia, in Bolivia coca production and consumption are
accepted as part of national custom. In the 1980s, however, United States’
pressure forced Bolivia to adopt draconian laws. Facing increasing government
repression, coca growers fought back, focusing on the coca leaf as a symbolic
and cultural resource. Grisaffi argues this forged a collective anti-imperialist
identification, and the basis of a social movement. Yet, this compelling ethnic
argument could not obscure the fact that a percentage of their harvest is used
for cocaine production.
In Chapter 1, Grisaffi describes the formation of the coca growing unions in
the 1980s, especially in the Chapare tropical region. He then takes up the
formation of the MAS (Movement Towards Socialism) political party. He
shows how the coca growers built the MAS and put it into power, transforming
a small organization into a ‘government of social movements’ they thought
could construct a new more democratic national government. The second
DOI: http://doi.org/10.132992/erlacs.10497 © Amy Kennemore, Nancy Postero. Open Access
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Book review 9 | ERLACS No. 107 (2019): January-June
chapter places this political trajectory into context by looking at “two faces of
coca”: the first, its traditional use and ritual character, and the second, as a part
of the illegal narcotics industry. This is a critical part of Grisaffi’s
contributions: he faces clearly what few other authors have been willing to
admit: coca-growers are tied to a criminal international economy. This forms
the basis of his central argument: Morales could not enact forced eradication
and risk the support of his base, but neither could he ignore international laws.
Thus, despite the power the coca growers had, larger political and legal
structures constrained the Morales regime’s abilities to enact the social
movement’s agendas. However, this was not the only reason for the tension
between the coca growers union and the Morales government. Chapter 3
describes the form of vernacular local democracy the coca growers practiced.
For the Chapare coca growers, Grisaffi says, democracy is not about
competitive elections, individual liberties, universal suffrage, and the secret
ballot. Instead, they expect leadership to remain deferential and collective, and
to “lead by obeying” (p. 11). This refers to the forms of direct participatory
democracy enacted in collective assemblies. The cocaleros expected this direct
connection with their leader to continue when Morales became president, but
that did not happen: Morales had to respond to wider constituency. This
chapter, based on Grisaffi’s many years of work in the region, provides a rare
view into a functioning form of alternative democracy. It is also an argument
for the anthropological method, showing how grounded empirical ethnographic
data is essential for theorizing about politics.
In the second half of the book, Grisaffi shows what happened when
Morales came to power. The cocaleros were able to enact their form of
vernacular democracy at the local level, in municipal government in the
Chapare. Yet, as Morales gained political power at the national level, he broke
with the cocaleros, even taking over a union radio station (described in Chapter
7). More importantly, the MAS government did not lift all sanctions on coca
production. Instead, it implemented the “Coca Yes, Cocaine No” initiative,
permitting a limited amount of legal production in the two coca regions, the
Chapare and the Yungas, regulated by processes of ‘social control’, where
unions themselves police coca production. As a result of this compromise
between social movement demands and international constraints, Grisaffi
argues, Morales could not protect all the rank and file cocaleros, many of
whose livelihoods were severely affected. This lead them to feel betrayed and
to call Morales’s legitimacy into question, even experiencing the MAS as a
form of domination (p. 194).
This is a moving story, tracing how the promise of the MAS victory in 2005
gave way to disappointment and a sense of betrayal by the grassroots social
movements that gave birth to it. This disillusionment is widespread among
many sectors of the MAS coalition. One lesson of this book is that analysts
should take into account alternative meanings of democracy from the
grassroots level to better understand tensions within, and the failures of, the
ruling MAS party. Thus, Grisaffi asks in the conclusion: "from the coca
growers’ perspective, what needs to change for the MAS’s experiment with
democracy to function better?” (p. 193). His account of local practices of
governing will be important reading for scholars of politics, indigenous studies,
and democracy. How and when can progressive ideas and practices be scaled
up? What are the larger structural obstacles? For scholars of social movements
more broadly, this book also might offer an insight into Morales’s betrayal of
other social groups in his coalition, such as lowland indigenous groups
resisting extractivism. (...truncated)