Abstract
The economic and social formation of Latin America is historically marked by the process of expropriation of the means of labor in the primitive accumulation of European capital, separating people from their lands and forms of community organization and forming a structure of dependence on Latin American countries. Bolivia has gone through this process of land dispute since its foundation and is transformed by social struggles arising from these contradictions, the synthesis of this conflict was the Revolution of 1952. Thus, it is noticeable a capture of the autonomous and revolutionary attempts to resolve land conflicts by the State, submitting them to the logic of capital, in such a way that more economic, social and geographic deformities are unfolded in the Bolivian territory, with class conflicts permeated by regionalism. This research was carried out in a qualitative way, through the method of historical-dialectical materialism, with a theoretical and historical review.
Keywords:
Bolivia; Earth; Community; Capital; Land reform