This paper is an exploration of the relations between the politics of identity and the socio-economic and political processes of the current era of globalization. Using ethnographic material from the transnational grassroots organizations of the Garinagu-an Afro-Indigenous population living in transnational communities between Central America and the US-I show the multiple ways that they articulate their identity between and among the tropes of "autocthony," "blackness," "Hispanic," "diaspora," and "nation." This construction and negotiation of identity is intimately connected to the negotiation of rights vis-a-vis nation-states and international political bodies, where ideologies of race, ethnicity, nation, and citizenship carry with them different implications for rights and belonging. I argue that the complexities of this case point to the uneven processes of globalization, within which the power to define the ideological terrain of economic and political struggles is still profoundly unequal.