Abstract
The concept of biopolitics is undoubtedly situated in contemporary
reflections with Michel Foucault as one of its notable representatives in
theoretical development. In this sense, recent research, even stepping
away from the ideas put forward by Foucault, has given way to valuable
notions, as in the cases of Esposito, Agamben, and Lemke. Evidently,
racism becomes important because of its magnitude and, above all, the
actuality that crosses the limits in the complex Bolivian reality. The
relationship between racism and biopolitics converges in a heated
philosophical and political interpretation. In the reflections on racism in
Bolivia, biopolitics can establish and connect aspects that have not been
taken into account so far in what is called racist ideology.