Article
Giselly Andrea Mejía Zapata
Liana Collective, New York, USA
Abstract
The coca plant’s Western narrative has long reduced her multifaceted identity to a single term, “cocaine.” However, a transformative movement is underway, with Andean and Amazon indigenous communities, rural groups, urban activists, academics, artists, and politicians actively redefining the coca leaf as sacred and advocating for change. Could coca serve as the catalyst propelling indigenous and Latin American futures thinking forward? Might the future of coca be the first step toward a fusion of ancestral and contemporary worlds? This paper delves into these questions using various futures methods, such as signal scanning, Three Horizons, Causal Layer Analysis, and the formulation of thought-provoking scenarios to investigate diverse future possibilities for coca.
Keywords
Coca Leaf, Latin American Futures, Decolonization, Reparations, Indigenous Futures.
Introduction
The contemporary Western narrative regarding the coca plant has been marked by the simplification of her plurality into a singular term: cocaine (Allen, 2002). This narrative represents a shift from diversity to uniformity, where the multifaceted applications and cultural significance of the plant—as understood and cherished by those who have a deep connection to it—have been overshadowed by the single, specific usage imposed upon her by the Western world.
The Western portrayal is now facing resistance from Andean and Amazon indigenous peoples and rural communities who have taken the reins in redefining the coca leaf, and actively pressuring governments and international bodies for change (Jaimes, 2023; Maihold, 2023; Manjarrés, 2022). These people have a millennial-long relationship with Mama Coca (the indigenous spiritual embodiment of coca) 1 as medicine, food, and connection to the land. Today, this movement is gaining even more momentum as urban activists, academics, artists, politicians, and even chefs come aboard. Together, they are forging a powerful movement that promises to shape a diverse landscape of future possibilities for the coca leaf.
Methodology
This study aims to explore the alternative futures of the polemic leaf, shedding light on her ancestral uses and the impact of policies on the communities that have used her for millennia. It also promises to serve as a tool for reflection on individual and collective positionality in the face of imminent changes in the perception of coca.
As Latin America continues to evolve and face new challenges (deforestation, migration, eruption of authoritarian regimes), there is a growing potential for increased interest and investment in futures thinking to address complex and interconnected issues. This becomes especially crucial in Colombia’s post-conflict context, where there is an aim to prevent the recurrence of violence, repare damages done to people and land, reconcile with our ancestral connections, and work towards a collectively envisioned future.
I have opted for a qualitative exploration, placing emphasis on speculative research, anticipating its significant contribution to the emerging field of indigenous and Latin American futures. While practitioners of speculative design and foresight innovation from the Global South have already begun advocating for futures thinking and recognizing its importance in long-term planning, Latin America lags behind (Duque-Gómez et al., 2022). There are few in-depth foresight-focused initiatives in Latin America, and most of the work is concentrated in architecture or urban planning.
This study commenced with an exploration of coca’s 8,000-year history and its intricate entanglement with global politics. Subsequently, I conducted primary research that actively incorporated the perspectives of migrant citizens from Andean and Amazon countries. These individuals have witnessed the impact of the plant’s stigmatization on their lives, representing voices typically overlooked. A detailed description of the research methods is provided below.
Table 1: Methodology
Type of Research | Research Methods | Description |
Secondary research | Desk research | Review of existing background materials and research on the history of coca from a Western and indigenous perspective, coca’s impacts on global politics, and differences between cultivator countries.
STEEP model: Categorization of signals of change by social, technological, economic, environmental, and political to understand the driving forces of change today. |
Historical timeline | Chronology of the history of coca until the present moment. | |
Primary Research | Intercept Interview | Short, structured conversations were conducted with workshop participants, researchers, and traditional users of coca. |
Workshops | 1. Three Horizon: Unpacking participants’ desires for change.
2. Causal Layered Analysis: Delving into the root causes of the current problem, brainstorming of potential solutions and align them with participants’ preferable futures. |
|
Speculative Research | Alternative Scenarios | Creation of alternative scenarios showcasing the possibilities for the future of coca, inviting readers to reflect on their perspectives.
1. Counterfactual: Explores how different actions could have led to different outcomes. This provides valuable insights for handling future behaviors and achieving our goals. 2. Probable Future: Expands on the current trends of coca continuing business as usual. 3. Preferable Futures: Offers a glimpse into the feasibility of realizing participant’s preferred futures. |
Future timeline | Chronology of the history of coca until the present moment, plus the integration of future scenarios, and how to get there. |
Mama Coca: Who she is and what she does
The plant I will discuss here has many names; some are very old, and others are more modern. Surely the plant would call herself by other names if she could, and surely there are many other names that are not known, or there is no written record of them. Hayo, ipadu, kukka, pajarita and Mama Coca are just a few examples of traditional names, representing different sub-species or indigenous languages2. Erythroxylum coca is her scientific name. Coca is a plant that has co-existed with humans in the Andes and Amazon region for about 8,000 years and continues to be part of the life and traditions of many indigenous and peasant communities in the region (Dillehay et al., 2010; Blickman, 2014).
Coca is a resilient, bush-like plant that can reach heights of two to three meters. She features small oval leaves with distinctive parallel lines along the central vein. The plant produces small white flowers and red fruits, approximately a centimeter in length, housing her seeds. While she typically prefers warm, moist conditions, coca can adapt to drier environments. She reproduces through seeds or stem cuttings, and within six months, yields the first batch of leaves for the use of the humans caring for her (F. A. Avila-Castillo, personal communication, August 23, 2023).
Fig. 1: Seed-grown plant of Erythroxylum Novogranatense. This plant is about 5 years old and 2 metres tall. (Photo from Wikimedia Commons)
The relationship between Andean indigenous peoples and Mama Coca is long and tight. For cultures such as the Muisca, Aymara, Quechua, Kogi, and others, coca is part of their cultural identity and hence, part of their quotidian life. In exchange for the care provided through harvest and rituals, the plant has shared her leaves, which, when chewed, provide mild stimulation that prevents hunger and fatigue in extended hours of work or long walks in the mountains. Coca helps them relieve digestive disorders, alleviates altitude sickness, provides local anesthesia, and has divinatory powers (Henman, 1978; Garrido-Lecca, 2022). Coca also plays a vital role in passing down knowledge, making political decisions, and participating in Amazonian rituals. Communities like the Murui Muina, Uitoto, Ocaina, Nonuya, Andoke, and Ooira use coca in ceremonies in the form of mambe. Mambe is a green powder created with roasted and crushed coca leaves mixed with yarumo3 ashes and is consumed slowly between the cheeks. Mambe is known for providing narrative powers to indigenous leaders who share stories, connect with the divine, and discuss community management and development (RTVC, 2023; Pereira E. 2012). Additionally, coca is used in making offerings to Mother Earth in the form of a k’intu. A k’intu is crafted from three select coca leaves and blown gently while invoking deities and spirits of the local mountains and sacred places (Allen, 2002).
Fig. 2: Coca indigenous mambe. (Photo from Wikimedia Commons)
Mama Coca is then food, a healer, an oracle, a spirit, a tool for conversation, an offering, and she is also an illegal plant. Her illegal status is connected to a modern use given to the plant since 1859 when a German chemist extracted one of the 14 alkaloids present in her leaves and called it cocaine. The narrow and colonial notion that coca is cocaine has created a stigma towards her consumers and ancestral growers. This presumption has sent peasants and indigenous people to prison, incited wars and violence, poisoned territories, made the traditional and sacred uses of the plant invisible, and minimized the knowledge of indigenous communities. As the Colombo-Canadian ethnobotanist Wade Davis says, “Declaring that coca is only cocaine is like saying that grapes are only wine and potatoes are only vodka” (Drug Science, 2022).
How a Sacred Plant Became Illegal
When the Spanish colonizers arrived in the continent we now call America, claiming discovery of already known lands, abusing and exterminating their people and their territories, and blinded by lust for power and wealth, they also encountered coca. The first written record that reports the use of coca in America was written by Americo Vespucio and dates from September 4th, 1504, when he describes his voyage along the north coast of South America in 1499 (Henman, 1978).
They were very ugly in manner and appearance; all had their cheeks bulging with a certain green herb which they chewed constantly, like cattle. They could hardly speak, and each carried two gourds hanging from his neck, one filled with the herb he had in his mouth, and the other with white flour [lime]that looked like powdered plaster. From time to time they would wet a stick, dip it in the flour with the herb… and, amazed at such a thing, we could not understand its secrets (Henman, 1978).
Spanish colonizers initially frowned upon coca leaf chewing, linking it to unattractive habits and witchcraft. The Catholic Church opposed her during its conversion efforts. However, the plant’s widespread use throughout the Andes and her medicinal benefits, including digestive and nervous ailment relief, began to change colonizers’ perceptions (Henman, 1978). Enthusiasm for the plant’s properties eventually reached Europe, where around 1858, German chemist Albert Niemann first isolated cocaine in a laboratory. The alkaloid was quickly adopted as an analgesic in surgeries, an antidote against morphine addiction, and used recreationally even by philosophers and writers such as Sigmund Freud (Henman, 1978). An important milestone occurred in the 1860s when Angelo Mariani created Vin Mariani, a popular coca-infused wine with high levels of cocaine. 4 This tonic enjoyed immense popularity in Europe and the United States and inspired the creation of other high-cocaine beverages, including Coca-Cola in 1885 (de Lestrange, 2018; Greenwood, 2016).
Fig. 3: Images of Vin Mariani and Coca-Cola Advertisement. Vin Mariani was advertised as a healthy, restorative, and energizing tonic. The wine was consumed by popes, presidents, sovereigns, ministers, and famous painters of the time (de Lestrange, 2018).
The misunderstanding that coca and cocaine are identical and yield similar effects became widespread as critics of coca leaf chewing tradition in South America drew parallels with cocaine use. One of the turning points came in 1924 with the publication of the book Phantastica by Louis Lewin. In his book, which was considered the epochal bible on the effects of narcotic and psychedelic substances, Lewin states, “The use of leaves and that of cocaine produces a very similar result as regards the actual symptoms and final form of cocaine evil.” The years following the publication were filled with prohibition and a vigorous campaign against coca chewing and cocaine products from the market (Henman, 1978). Finally, in 1961, the United Nations Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs5 put coca leaves in the same category of narcotics Schedule 1 as cocaine and mandated the destruction of illegallycultivated coca bushes and the abolition of coca leaf chewing within a 25-year period (Blickman, 2014).
Fig. 4: Cover of book Phantastica by Louis Lewin, M.D. (Source: Simon & Schuster, 2023).
The international ban on coca leaves and cocaine precipitated the creation of international policies like the War on Drugs, which the United States has waged for five decades and spent millions of dollars without reducing the production, drug trade, and consumption of the alkaloid (“ONDCP Releases Data on Coca Cultivation and Production in the Andean Region,” 2022). In 1999, during the Clinton administration, the United States signed Plan Colombia6 with the aim of addressing narcotrafficking prompted by a national crisis stemming from a cocaine consumption epidemic in the country (Lee, 2020). Despite recommendations from the Rand Drug Policy Research Center study, which estimated that drug treatment is twenty-three times more effective than supply-side law enforcement (Rydell & Everingham, 1994), the U.S. government proceeded with this decision. In 1995, the estimated coca leaf production for cocaine in Colombia was 51,000 hectares (UNODC’s Illicit Crop Monitoring Programme, 2006). In 2021, this figure surged to a total of 234,000 hectares (“ONDCP Releases Data on Coca Cultivation and Production in the Andean Region,” 2022).
The War on Drugs has also brought catastrophic social and environmental consequences and disproportionately affected cultivating countries like Colombia, Bolivia, and Peru. Poisonous aerial herbicide application, forced eradication, militarization, forced displacement, stigmatization, and prohibition have turned peasants and indigenous peoples into state enemies, fueled the Colombian armed conflict for decades, and caused death and sickness to people and rainforests (Thornton, 2022). However, the ban and the fact that the coca leaf and cocaine are both labeled as narcotics by the UN has not affected the Coca-Cola company, which continues to use decocainized7 coca leaves from Peru in its famous beverage, and has billions of dollars worth of sales around the world (Geib, 2023; May, 1988). On the other hand, the status and role of governance in the field of public utilities is an interdisciplinary issue and has been the subject of debate for decades in the economic, social, political and legal spheres. (Wilbanks, Bilello, Schmalzer, & Scott, 2012, p. 12)
Coca’s chronology can then be split into five periods (see Fig. 5).
- Ancestral period of Mama Coca in the Andes.
- The European encounter with coca until the extraction of cocaine in 1860.
- The rise and fall of coca and cocaine. A global craze for coca’s famous alkaloid until the international prohibition in 1961.
- Coca and cocaine locked in a war. Political decisions around the illegal trade of cocaine.
- Reclaiming the leaf. The period, beginning in the 2000s until the present, is characterized by indigenous peoples’ organized resistance to maintaining their customary relationships with the coca plant.
This last period, speaks about the long fight indigenous communities worldwide have fought against erasure, commodification, appropriation, and forced assimilation. As Jane Carling, an indigenous activist from the Cordillera Philippines, said in a talk at The New York University on September 18, 2023:
What defines us, what makes us distinct is our spiritual, cultural, and intergenerational tights with the land and its resources. Our life is lived collectively with nature, and our call has always been that we exist, WE EXIST! We existed and governed ourselves before the creation of nation-states, we ask respect for our cultural diversity, we ask for freedom from discrimination and the right to participate in decision-making that affects our customary lands.
Analyzing the current period in coca’s history provides insights into potential futures that can go from destigmatization to the possible legalization and regulation of coca-derived products, including cocaine. What are the signals of change disrupting coca’s timeline? How might these developments shape coca’s future and impact cultivator nations like Bolivia, Colombia, and Peru? What steps are required for reparation and reconciliation for the plant, land, and people? Could this lead to a new phase of colonization and industrialization, similar to other plants like cannabis? What role will indigenous communities play in this transition?
Fig. 5: Historical Coca Timeline.
Coca politics today: Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia’s different perspectives on coca
In contrast to Colombia, Peru and Bolivia have a higher percentage of people who consider themselves indigenous. Specifically, 26% of Peru’s population and 41% of Bolivia’s population identify as indigenous (“Partipación Política de los pueblos indígenas,” 2022; “El Mundo Indígena 2020: Bolivia,” 2020). This is one of the reasons why in Peru and Bolivia, coca enjoys a different legal and social status that allows the coca-chewing habit to be more accepted, and the commercialization of coca-derived products has been allowed for decades. You can find products such as cookies, soft drinks, balms, teas, and flours derived from the leaf on the shelves of traditional herb stalls and supermarkets next to other ‘superfood’ products like maca, moringa, or matcha. Peru also created the National Coca Company ENACO, a public state entity dedicated to the production and commercialization of coca and her derivatives. ENACO is the company that sells the coca leaves that end up in Coca-Cola drinks worldwide (Geib, 2023; May, 1988).
Bolivia has been a leader of the coca resistance movement in the region. One of the crucial moments in the post-modern history of coca was the intervention of former Bolivian President Evo Morales (a former coca grower and active member of the coca growers’ movement) at the United Nations Commission on Narcotic Drugs convention in Vienna in 2009. It was the first time, but not the last—Evo Morales would do it again in 2013 at the same conference and in other international spaces—that he carried and consumed coca leaf in front of all the world leaders attending the event while giving his speech in favor of the traditional consumption of coca and advocating for her removal from the UN category as a narcotic (Morales, 2009; Sárosi, 2009).
Fig. 6: Evo Morales holding a k’intu of coca leaves in the Commission on Narcotic Drugs in Vienna on March 11, 2009 (Sárosi, 2009).
In Colombia, however, the situation has been different. With indigenous people representing only 4.4% of the population (“Población indígena en Colombia,” 2019), an evident disconnection with our native ancestors, and the baggage of a 60-year-long history with war and drug trafficking, many Colombians perceive coca solely as cocaine. The United States’ policies, particularly the failed War on Drugs, continue to have a detrimental impact on coca farmers, indigenous communities, and the land itself. Excessive militarization, violence, incarceration, and forced eradication efforts disproportionately affect remote areas that have been neglected by the Colombian state, where cultivating coca often becomes the sole means of providing for one’s family. As community leader Maria Carvajal, said: “Coca became the mayor of the peasants because it helps them sustain their families, fix bridges, build roads, build schools, and pay teachers. So, farmers do not plant coca because they want to, but because there is no other alternative.” (Mutante, 2021).
The War on Drugs’ efforts have created an atmosphere of shame and taboo towards coca for most people within Colombia and internationally, who associate the leaf only with drug trafficking. Until just three years ago, I also referred to coca and cocaine as the same thing. I was completely unaware of her history of reciprocity with indigenous communities and carried the stigma and shame when I became a migrant. Being Colombian abroad means having a lot of fear when crossing borders, constant terror that you will be denied a visa, excessive scrutiny at airports, and constant exposure to jokes or unsolicited requests at parties to buy cocaine from you. Now when I meet someone new, I like to ask this question to get a sense of that person’s cultural perceptions and references to my home country: What comes to mind when you think about Colombia? Some people mention the telenovela Ugly Betty or the beautiful women of our country, which are contrasting points but are simultaneously talking about the same unhealthy obsession of my country with global standards of beauty—a few others talk about good coffee, football, and, more recently, reggaeton. But what most people answer right away, even with a certain excitement and usually accompanied by jokes, is a reference to the show Narcos, Pablo Escobar, or another connection of our country to cocaine.
Coca’s three horizons: A Glimpse into Future Possibilities
In the fall of 2022, together with other Colombians living in New York City, we formed the collective Liana. One of Liana’s projects is called Coca Worlds, which seeks to highlight artistic practices involving the coca plant and aims to foster dialogues to expand narratives about the sacred plant. With my background in futures design and social practice, I proposed exploring the futures of coca by applying diverse methodologies that provoke critical conversations and allow us to expand our imagination colonized by years of mainstream media, stigmatization, and assimilation of Western thought.
As part of Liana’s first research and art residency, known as Las Yerbas Apothecary, the collective convened to watch four short documentaries concerning the diverse issues coca growers face in Colombia. After presenting the four shorts, we asked an audience of around 50 individuals from Colombia, Mexico, Peru, and North America to re-imagine the futures of coca using the Three Horizons method. The framework serves as a valuable tool to understand cultural changes, making us more conscious of how our individual and group intents and actions actively impact the future. It offers flexibility in exploring the potential of the present moment and inspires innovative thinking and action in the face of an uncertain future (Wahl, 2017).
Fig. 7: Three Horizon’s board on the event “Watch and Talk Coca”. Participants of the event held on August 4th, 2023, added their ideas on the Three Horizons board about the future of coca leaf. (Photos by Alejandro Jaramillo).
Horizon 1 (H1). Visualizing participants’ desires for change
Current system that has begun to show signs of decay or crisis. H1 is the horizon of business as usual and therefore requires transformation.
Table 2: Participants’ answers to H1 question: What practices must end for there to be another relationship with the coca plant in the future?
“In my school in Florida, I was taught the South American capitals with words beginning with the same letter. Bogota-Bullets, Colombia-Cocaine. We have to move away from these violent associations.”
“The leaf is not a drug” |
“That we continue to see cocaine consumption as a crime and not as a health issue, and regularize it.” |
“The deforestation of the jungle for the planting of coca.” |
“The jokes about cocaine to Colombians.” |
“We need fewer Netflix series.” |
Participants expressed the urgent need to dispel the stigma surrounding the plant, as well as the harmful stereotypes associating cocaine with Colombian citizens, which are often perpetuated by mass media. They also emphasized the importance of reevaluating the War on Drugs policy, as it has disproportionately impacted certain territories and communities where coca holds deep cultural and spiritual significance as a means of livelihood.
Horizon 2 (H2). Period of transition
Culturally creative space for social, technological, economic, environmental and political viable initiatives that can disrupt and transform H1.
Table 3: Participants’ answers to H2 question: What initiatives and events are rethinking the place of coca in the present?
“Coca growers express harassment from the Peruvian government. Support cocaleros, who are brave indigenous communities who defend coca as an ancestral medicine.” |
“Futuro Coca Festival in Colombia.” |
“Artistic visibility.” |
“Visibility of the traditional use of coca.” |
“Films, shorts, music, narratives that talk about coca.” |
“Conscious drug consumption initiatives promoted by campaigns such as Echele cabeza cuando te des en la cabeza and Apoya no castigues.” |
“The creation of the association of growers of coca, marijuana, and poppy in Colombia — COCCAM.” |
“Hundreds of coca leaf products with benefits equal to or greater than products found on the market.” |
The public discourse has seen the emergence of numerous political and grassroots initiatives aimed at reshaping our perspectives on and advocating for the legalization and regulation of coca and her derivatives. Noteworthy among these endeavors are the various artistic, civic, and academic movements dedicated to raising awareness about the coca leaf’s traditional, nutritional, and medicinal applications. Notably, participants underscored the significance of the Futuro Coca festival, which took place in Colombia in July 2023. Additionally, they shed light on diverse processes of community organization and resistance in Peru and Colombia, undertaken to safeguard indigenous and rural traditions and exert influence on the national policies of both nations. Furthermore, participants shared insights into ongoing research endeavors and public health campaigns that aim to foster informed drug consumption practices and promote the inclusion of drug users in discussions surrounding legalization and regulation.
Horizon 3 (H3). The future that participants imagined
Visions and perspectives of a viable world. This horizon does not pretend to predict the future but rather allows us to engage in conversations and imagine a possible world.
Table 4: Participants’ answers to H3 question: How do we imagine coca futures?
“I envision the future of coca, knowing where she comes from, knowing what she means. She is not cocaine, She is Mama Coca. There are so many uses for her. She is so sacred. So, I think one way to start is to educate ourselves and decolonize how we perceive coca.” |
“Legalization of coca and cocaine. Regulated sale in pharmacies around the world. Ample research in pathologies.” |
“Respect for the user. Involve cocaine users in these spaces. Expand, extend the conversation beyond the academic circle.” |
“Journalistic projects that connect the origin of coca with the cocaine consumer. It has to be a change of mentality just like how we have begun to consume other products with more awareness.” |
“Openness to the world. Traveling the world, healing the word, and accompanying it.” |
“Accessible and moderate regulation that allows the production, distribution and commercialization of coca leaf products.” |
“A greater awareness, appropriation, and relevance of the relationship of coca with spiritual practices and the rapprochement with nature. Decolonize coca and the way she is perceived. Use her in our day-to-day.” |
“Indigenous and peasant governance. Let the community be the leaders.” |
“Include the coca growers of the Colombian Pacific in the conversation. The impact is not limited to the indigenous and peasant communities in the east of the country.” |
“Developed countries at risk of food security, committed to the purchase of crops that can replace coca and create alternatives for peasants. Create benefits for farmers.” |
“Reparations are needed.” |
“Resisting capitalism, creating spaces with the peasants at the center.
Contribution to the environment and climate change.” |
The responses we received from the public can be grouped into three categories: (1) End of stigmatization and education that restores our relationship with the plant, (2) Decolonialism and reparations, and (3) Increase research on the leaf for medical use.
End of stigmatization and education that restores our relationship with the plant
In the quest to eliminate stigma and foster a renewed understanding of coca, participants stressed the imperative for educational spaces that not only expound upon the plant’s significance within ancestral traditions but also extend beyond the confines of academia, actively engaging cocaine consumers. These discussions included proposals for potential curricula to be incorporated into school systems and innovative strategies, such as mobile academies that disseminate coca-related knowledge globally.
Decolonialism and reparations
Participants articulated a vision for the future of coca that necessitates compensatory measures for communities and territories adversely impacted by the War on Drugs policies. These reparations could help address food insecurity, infrastructure problems, lack of access to education and health, and repair environmental damage done to the land. Furthermore, they stressed the importance of acknowledging the roles played by the U.S. government and profit-driven corporations in their enrichment from coca. Participants also expressed a desire for indigenous and peasant farmers (including coca growers in the Pacific of Colombia—a region with a mainly Black population) to occupy central positions in the regularization, production, distribution, and commercialization of coca leaf products. This vision reflects aspirations for indigenous sovereignty and concerns about the potential industrialization of coca, which could perpetuate colonial practices akin to those observed with the legalization of other potent plants, such as cannabis.
Increase research for medical use
Moreover, the participants envisioned a future for coca that hinges on heightened research efforts geared toward medical applications. This future embodies a fusion of scientific and traditional knowledge, fostering innovative breakthroughs in healthcare practices that harmoniously integrate these two realms.
In-Depth Examination of Horizon Two Initiatives
As part of my research, I have been scanning signals of change8 and organizing them into the STEEP model9. These signals group all the H2 topics participants mentioned in the exercise.
Social
- The Futuro Coca festival was the first event of its kind held in Bogota, Colombia, in July 2023. The festival served as a hub that gathered gastronomic exponents, designers, ecologists, artists, audiovisual producers, indigenous leaders, and the general public to exchange ideas about coca (Jaimes, 2023).
- For decades, Latin American artists have explored and expressed the complexities of the coca leaf through various mediums, fostering critical discussions on her stigmatization, connections to drug trafficking, and broader global impacts.
- Notably, consuming mambe and coca chewing has begun to gain popularity among urban dwellers in Colombia. This trend has notably infiltrated privileged circles with access to academic, political, or artistic realms, where discussions surrounding these practices have found a receptive audience.
Technological
- Veronica Akle is a professor of Neuroscience at the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Los Andes in Colombia. Alongside indigenous peoples, she is at the forefront of a medical research endeavor examining potential applications of the coca leaf in addressing cardiovascular and pulmonary conditions, as well as attention-deficit disorders. Their innovative approach blends ancestral wisdom with contemporary scientific methods (Futuro Coca, 2023).
Economic
- Indigenous communities have countered coca plant stigma by using her in food products (teas, cookies, soft drinks, flour), which have thrived commercially, bolstering their economic sustainability. Recently, coca leaves have also gained popularity among celebrated chefs, upscale restaurants, and urban entrepreneurs, leading to innovative culinary creations in Colombia (Díaz, 2023).
- In 2021, Coca-Cola sent a letter to Coca Nasa10 requesting the removal of the word “coca” from their product Coca Pola,11 citing trademark violations. Coca Nasa answered with another letter requesting Coca-Cola to remove the word from Coca-Cola’s brand and questioning their authority to use the term, which indigenous peoples had been using for millennia before the multinational even existed. There hasn’t been any reply from Coca-Cola probably due to fear of bad press (Woods et al., 2023).
- In 2023, plummeting coca leaf prices in Colombia are causing severe hardship for farmers, impacting their ability to provide for their families. Factors contributing to the decline might include the growing problem of fentanyl addiction in the United States and the new Colombian president’s conciliatory approach toward coca growers. In response, farmers are shifting to alternative crops or abandoning coca cultivation altogether (Sanchéz, 2023; “Parts of Colombia are now awash with cocaine,” 2023).
- Some peasants who used to grow coca in Colombia are changing their crops for cannabis due to the rise of demand for the plant from international companies from places where recreational consumption is already legal (F. A. Avila-Castillo, personal communication, August 23, 2023).
Environmental
- The coca crops have been associated with the deforestation and contamination of fields and water sources (Mowbray, 2022). Tropical areas comprise the vast majority of deforestation globally, and this plant loss contributes to climate change (Ritchie, 2024). Because of the persecution of the leaf coming from the War on Drugs, some coca farmers hide their plantations in national protected areas (Mowbray, 2022).
- Coca farmers engaged in the illegal production of cocaine heavily depend on fertilizers and pesticides to boost leaf production, which can impact both the land and the health of the cultivators (Gatopardo, 2023).
Political
- In March 2023, the governments of Colombia and Bolivia presented a formal petition at the UN conference of the Commission of Drug and Narcotics (CND) in Vienna to remove the coca leaf from the list of narcotics (Maihold, 2023). The World Health Organization (WHO) is set to conduct a thorough examination of the coca leaf in the coming year. Depending on the results, the WHO will propose changes to its UN drug classification. The recommendations will undergo approval by the CND, with voting expected in 2025 (Walsh & Jelsma, 2023).
- In 2020, Colombian Senators Marulanda and Valencia introduced a bill to legalize and regulate coca cultivation, aiming to address issues linked to drug trafficking. The goal was state control to mitigate violence, corruption, deforestation, and lack of trust. The bill aimed to protect children, decriminalize consumers and uphold indigenous rights. The bill was voted against in 2021 after two debates (Marulanda & Valencia, n.d.)
- The first-ever left-wing president of Colombia talked in favor of the legalization of the coca leaf and against the War on Drugs politics in the 77th General Assembly of the United Nations in 2022. Gustavo Petro’s speech marks a significant change in Colombia’s position on pivotal issues and its relations with the United States (Manjarrés, 2022).
A Causal Layer Analysis on Coca
The next framework I wanted to apply to the future of coca was Causal Layer Analysis (CLA). As a critical futures research method created by Sohail Inayatullah, CLA is concerned with exploring alternative futures by delving into the vertical dimensions of a topic and involving various layers of analysis (Inayatullah, 2004).
On Thursday, September 13, 2023, I facilitated a CLA workshop with Colombian migrants in New York working on the coca plant from different disciplines—artists, historians, biologists, and lawyers. I asked the following questions to explore the four levels of the methodology:
- Litany: Trends or issues frequently inflated for political agendas, leading to emotions of helplessness and apathy.
- What are the current news headlines and trends around coca?
- System: Systemic causes of the issues presented in the litany level.
- What do you think are the triggers behind those headlines?
- Worldview: Discourses that support and legitimate the problem. These can come from ideologies, stakeholders’ interests, or worldviews.
- What are the mainstream discourses around the headlines?
- Metaphor: Deep narratives that tap into the subconscious and often evoke emotional aspects of an issue. It prioritizes visual imagery over linguistic aspects.
- What are the myths people hold about coca?
Table 5: CLA workshop analysis.
CLA levels | Workshop participants’ views | Interventions towards preferable futures (These are a result of participants’ views in Three Horizon and CLA workshops, and the analysis of this research) |
Litany | Multiple news sources report that Colombia has reached an all-time high in coca cultivation for cocaine production. | Implement a solutions journalism approach that not only focuses on what is wrong but also critically examines how people address shared problems. |
System | The cultivation of coca for cocaine production is linked to the absence of alternative income and employment opportunities, social class divisions, and structural racism.
New drug policies tend to be developed in a top-down manner, excluding coca farmers, indigenous communities, and cocaine consumers from decision-making processes. The predominant response to the high demand and production of cocaine has been primarily militaristic and punitive. |
The government adopts a participatory, decentralized approach in crafting drug-related and public policies, involving the directly affected.
Integration of indigenous and Black heritage studies in the educational system of Andean countries. Legalization and regularization of coca-based products. Accountability and reparations for the harm caused by the War on Drugs and the prohibition of coca. Holistic drug abuse treatment, addressing societal issues, respecting individual rights to alter consciousness, and promoting informed drug use. |
Worldview | Western and scientific approach has a long history of neglecting the ancestral wisdom and life experiences of indigenous peoples worldwide.
Individualistic and stereotyped view of drug addictions. |
Science and ancestral knowledge collaborate for the betterment of humanity and the environment.
Altered states of consciousness are more accepted by society. |
Metaphor/Myth | Coca and cocaine are the same and produce the same effects.
Colombians are drug dealers. |
Cocaine is only one of many alkaloids present in the coca plant, representing 0.1 and 0.8 percent (depending on the coca species and variety).
Coca is a medicinal and nutritious plant, whose traditional consumption does not cause addiction. Colombians are seen as an example of social innovation and indigenous rights. |
Fig. 8: CLA workshop whiteboard.
Three Alternative Scenarios for Mama Coca
After workshops and analysis, I’ve created three scenarios reflecting diverse themes explored from this research. Using Three Horizons, I captured participants’ preferable futures and areas for change. The STEEP model highlighted current social, technological, economic, environmental, and political shifts in coca. CLA workshops further analyzed the vertical dimensions of current changes, offering potential solutions aligned with participants’ envisioned futures. The resulting scenarios showcase varied possibilities for the future of coca, inviting readers to reflect on their perspectives.
- Counterfactual: A counterfactual scenario is crafted to demonstrate how individual actions and historical twists can reshape the future trajectory. It explores how different actions could have led to different outcomes, providing valuable insights for handling future behaviors and achieving our goals.
- Probable Future: A scenario that expands on the current trends of coca continuing business as usual.
- Preferable Future: Illuminates a scenario where solutions to existing challenges align with the envisioned preferences of participants. This presentation offers a glimpse into the feasibility of realizing these preferable futures.
Fig. 9: Three alternative scenarios.
Scenario 1: From Controversy to Cure: The Coca Alkaloids’ Medical Journey
Approach: Counterfactual story.
Topics integrated:
- Extended medical research
- Integration of indigenous knowledge
Following the isolation of cocaine from coca leaves in 1858, medical research on the alkaloid gained popularity in both the United States and Europe. At the age of 28, the ambitious Freud, keen on staying abreast of the trend, conducted self-experiments and documented the physiological effects of cocaine in his 1884 paper “On Coca.” This groundbreaking research explored the potential therapeutic uses of cocaine for conditions like melancholia and morphine addiction, as well as its applications in local anesthesia.
However, Freud’s work faced opposition, notably from his adversary Louis Lewin, who contested Freud’s findings in light of his exploration of mind-altering plants. Other doctors joined in, documenting the addictive properties of cocaine when misused.
Recognizing the controversy surrounding his work, Freud embarked on a journey to South America to understand the plant’s origins. Freud returned to Europe after 18 months and decided to deepen his experiments. After five years, he published the results of his research, emphasizing that the Indians chewing coca habit show no signs of psychosis or addiction. He also detailed experiments with lower doses of cocaine paired with talk and cathartic therapy (that he learned from his mentor Josef Breuer), yielding impressive results in the treatment of melancholia, hysteria, and other nervous afflictions.
Freud’s research sparked a societal shift, challenging prevailing negative views of cocaine. People began to recognize the alkaloid’s potential for medical use, and Freud is now regarded as the father of psychopharmacology and psychoanalysis. His work paved the way for the development of medications addressing depression, attention-deficit disorders, and various other conditions.
More recently, the exploration of Truxilline, one of the thirteen alkaloids present in coca, is being tested as a stimulant for commercial purposes, offering the potential to compete with caffeine and nicotine.
Scenario 2: Coca Chic: How Cocaine-Infused Products Captivated the World
Approach: Probable future.
Topics integrated:
- Industrial agriculture dominated by global corporations.
- Excessive consumption culture
- Standards of beauty
The groundbreaking response of removing coca leaf from the UN list of narcotics paves the way for legalizing edible products, teas, protein powders, and various other coca-leaf-based products worldwide. As the world embraces this newfound freedom, the consumption of coca-base products skyrockets. The coca leaf, once stigmatized, is now hailed as a superfood, sought after for her unique properties.
Multinational corporations, who see a golden opportunity in South America, venture into the business of coca cultivation and the production of diverse coca-based goods. In their quest for profit, they clear vast swaths of Amazon rainforest for industrial coca plantations. To meet the growing global demand for coca, they use artificial lighting systems to accelerate plant growth and heavy pesticides and fertilizers, which have detrimental effects on the soil, poison rivers and create numerous health problems for people nearby. As the water supply dwindles due to coca cultivation, communities begin to protest, clamoring for access to clean drinking water. A strange consequence of this coca craze is that being Colombian suddenly became the coolest thing in the world.
Personal DIY kits that allow individuals to separate cocaine from the dried coca leaf from the comfort of their homes emerged. This invention raises alarms among drug lords, corporations, and corrupt politicians who see their profits threatened. A wave of innovation swept through the world, leading to the creation of various devices for coca leaf consumption, much like the myriad gadgets for coffee enthusiasts. Machines that produce mambe in just two minutes with pre-made ingredient packages become all the rage.
In the cities, poporos and traditional-looking bags to carry coca leaves become the latest fashion trend. Urban enlightening rituals where people gather to consume coca leaves and mambe become the new main source of tourism in Colombia. The allure of coca products also captivates women worldwide, who see the suppression of hunger properties of the leaf as a good tactic to shed pounds. Influencers and celebrities use social media to promote these products, sparking a cultural phenomenon.
Scenario 3: Coca’s Global Renaissance: A Story of Healing and Reconciliation
Approach: Preferable future.
Topics integrated:
- Indigenous Governance
- Education on historical heritage
- Reparations and accountability
- Medical research
After extensive advocacy spanning communities, organisms, and nations, the UN takes a pivotal step by removing the coca leaf from its list of controlled substances. This historic decision is publicly announced in Vienna, accompanied by a UN apology for the harm inflicted on people and territories. The announcement triggers a widespread transnational celebration in Andean and Amazon countries, prompting calls for a comprehensive strategy involving public participation in crafting coca-related policies. Simultaneously, the UN establishes a dedicated group tasked with implementing reparations for individuals and territories affected by decades of prohibition.
As part of the reparations and reconciliation efforts, governments, medical research labs, Coca-Cola, and Angelo Mariani’s descendants are urged to contribute funds back to coca-cultivating communities. The entrusted funds are placed under the stewardship of the Federation of Cocacultivators (Fedecoca), a newly formed body representing indigenous communities and coca farmers in Colombia, Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru. Fedecoca directs these funds towards safeguarding territories from deforestation and industrial agriculture, supporting education, healthcare, infrastructure, and fostering active participation in the development of global policies for the cultivation, production, and trade of coca-based products.
Fedecoca also embarks on a mission to promote a comprehensive understanding of coca’s history and indigenous traditions, starting in schools. Ministries of education begin incorporating these teachings into their curricula. This move triggers more people in Colombia to begin to reconnect with their indigenous and Black origins. This change is supported by the Colombian Government, which introduces a public policy offering DNA tests to all citizens for free to determine their indigenous and African heritage.
Coca Medical research done in the intersection of traditional knowledge and modern science yields a groundbreaking discovery: another alkaloid in the coca plant has the potential to reduce symptoms of depression. This revelation reshapes the world’s perception of coca, transforming her from a symbol of prohibition to a source of healing and cultural revival. The Colombian Congress is in the third and last debate to approve the legalization of cocaine, leading to a rift in its law enforcement relations with the United States.
Conclusion
This research has shown that the integration of history12 in the educational system and beyond is essential, as well as involving the entire population to avoid elitism or discrimination (Duque-Gómez et al., 2022). In a world saturated with shallow information and short attention spans, it is easy to feel helpless. Yet, history shows that small actions can spark influential movements, emphasizing our collective power to shape an uncertain future.
Coca’s history not only emphasizes her distinction from cocaine but also sheds light on a broader issue—the need for many Latin Americans to reconnect with their ancestral heritage. The process of assimilation, rooted in colonial times and reinforced by nation-state formation and capitalism, has profoundly influenced Latin American lives. The rejection of indigenous and Black roots is tied to a colonial legacy that values productivity, wealth accumulation, social validation, competitive power dynamics, detachment from the land, individualism, and neglect of communal bonds. Unfortunately, unless of recent European ancestry, most Colombians remain largely unaware of their heritage, creating a significant historical gap for those with mixed backgrounds dating back to colonization.
Exploring our Latin American heritage does not require us to abandon modern lifestyles. Instead, it presents an opportunity for harmonious coexistence with our cultural diversity. While indigenous communities globally have embraced formal education, learned non-indigenous languages, participated in politics, and incorporated aspects of the modern world, this cultural integration has not been reciprocated equally. I believe it is feasible to find a balance between modern and ancestral traditions without romanticizing indigenous communities or dismissing them as superstitious. It is imperative that we respect their intergenerational knowledge transfer, ancestral healing practices, and wisdom, even if they diverge from conventional scientific norms. The futures of Latin America are deeply intertwined with those of indigenous and Black communities.
In the three scenarios above, I explore the amplification of events from diverse perspectives within our historical context. This mirrors the potential impact of our choices. We could contribute to the expansion of the existing industrial complex and corporation’s hegemonic power that governs our system—transforming the coca plant into a popular commodity and turning us into passive consumers, akin to the current trend with psilocybin mushrooms. This could lead to significant social and environmental consequences such as large-scale deforestation and excessive water use, similar to issues observed with cannabis cultivation.
Alternatively, we have the option to amplify a different narrative. By aligning with activists advocating for historical justice, and striving for reciprocity and reparations, we contribute to a more sustainable future. Reparations and accountability, in this context, become crucial concepts. It is essential to leverage our privileges to give back, whether through dedicating time, financial resources, land, or apologies. Reparations should also extend beyond humanity and encompass rivers, oceans, mountains, other animals, and plants. Notably, the planning and execution of reparations must be thoughtful and involve active participation from all affected parties.
As we contemplate the future of the coca plant, it becomes evident that our actions today will shape its trajectory. Embracing change requires fostering hope and critically assessing established norms for alignment with evolving values. It is not enough to merely question; we must act purposefully, contributing to a narrative that reflects our commitment to sustainability, justice, and thoughtful reparations. Moving towards a future where coca-derived products, including cocaine, are legalized doesn’t mean endorsing them. It could involve regularization, indigenous governance, increased research on plant properties and potential medical uses, and a shift in addressing drug addiction from punishment to health. Communal action and public policy changes are necessary.
Acknowledgements
I would like to express my sincere gratitude to Juan Pablo Caicedo for generously inviting us to participate in his exhibition project, Coca Worlds, and to Angélica Cuevas for her boundless energy that ultimately brought us together to establish Liana Collective. I extend grateful acknowledgment to all members of the Coca Worlds project—Natalia Mahecha, Benjamin Gaillard-Garrido, Andrés Avila-Castillo, Juan José Guzman, and Melody Feo—for their valuable support, knowledge, and dedicated time invested in this research. My appreciation also extends to artist Tatiana Arocha for her support and the wealth of knowledge derived from her impressive art involving the coca leaf.
Additionally, I want to express my thanks to artist Cristina Pescoran for sharing her experiences with coca abroad. Special gratitude is extended to Elliot Montgomery for encouraging my submission to this call for papers, and to Radha Mistry for her invaluable feedback on the methodology of this research.
Heartfelt thanks go to Darian Woods and Alisha Bhagat for their meticulous revisions and constructive feedback on my manuscripts. I express my gratitude to Canal Projects Gallery, particularly Sara Garzón, the curator of Canal Projects, as well as Maya Hayda, Andrew Lee, and Summer Guthery, for their guidance and significant contribution to the success of this endeavor. Their support in the installation and art residency of “Las Yerbas” played a crucial role in facilitating participant engagement in this research. Special appreciation is extended to the participants of the “Hable y Vea Coca” events for sharing valuable insights into their relationship with coca and envisioning its future.
In closing, I extend heartfelt appreciation to the activists, indigenous communities, and coca farmers who persistently resist the erasure of their traditions, working tirelessly to evoke change. Your dedication and resilience in upholding the significance of coca in cultural heritage are truly inspiring.
Notes
- The mythical personage Mama Coca represents the universal and supreme mama goddess, Pachamama or Mother Earth, but also the magical power of the coca plant (Henman, 1978).
- Other names include jayo, ji-pia, maase, hibia, hibianga, jibbiae, hibi, hibio, ji-bbi, ebee, jipi, jibie, ipado, and ypadu (Diaz, 2003).
- Yarumo is part of the genre Cecropia and it is a representative tree of the American intertropical zone and extends from Mexico to South America, including the Antilles.
- The ethanol in the wine acted as a solvent and extracted the cocaine from the coca leaves. It originally contained 6 mg of cocaine per fluid ounce of wine (211.2 mg/L). (Karch, 2017)
- The 1961 Single Convention’s inclusion of coca leaves relied heavily on a 1950 ECOSOC report, which portrayed coca leaf chewing as harmful, and linked it to cocainism. The ECOSOC report faced criticism for the composition of its research team, perceived arbitrariness, inadequate methodology, lack of precision, and racial undertones, making it unlikely that a similar study would pass today’s rigorous scrutiny and critical review applied to scientific research (Blickman, 2014).
- From the initiation of Plan Colombia in 2000 until 2015, the Colombian government received close to $10 billion in aid from the United States, with 71% of the funds designated for security-related purposes (Lee, 2020).
- Process by which one of the 14 alkaloids present on the coca leaves is extracted.
- Signals of Change scanning is a future methodology to discover early signs of change and examine potential threats and opportunities. The signals could be emerging trends, technologies, specific products, policies, events, experiences, or ideas about how the world is changing that hint at where we might be headed. They can be positive, negative, both, or neither.
- STEEP is an acronym for Social, Technological, Economic, Environmental, and Political. Its framework to analyze the different systematic complexities of trends.
- Coca Nasa is an indigenous project of the Nasa people in Colombia dedicated to the preparation and marketing of foods based on coca leaves.
- Coca Pola is the first coca leaf beer made with coca from indigenous crops in Cauca, Colombia. Pola is a common word to refer to beer in Colombia.
- In Colombia, only until December 2017, the teaching of history was added to the educational system as part of a wider social studies module. The new bill reversed a 1994 law that had taken history classes off school curriculums (Caselli, 2018).
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