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6. “Let Us Walk Together”: Chachawarmi Complementarity and Indigenous Autonomies in Bolivia

  • Ana Cecilia Arteaga Böhrt
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Demanding Justice and Security
This chapter is in the book Demanding Justice and Security
© 2019 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

© 2019 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS v
  3. Preface vii
  4. Introduction. Demanding Justice and Security: Indigenous Women and Legal Pluralities in Latin America 1
  5. PART ONE. Gender and Justice: Mediating State Law and International Norms
  6. 1. Between Community Justice and International Litigation: The Case of Inés Fernández before the Inter-American Court 29
  7. 2. Domestic Violence and Access to Justice: The Political Dilemma of the Cuetzalan Indigenous Women’s Home (CAMI) 51
  8. 3. Between Participation and Violence: Gender Justice and Neoliberal Government in Chichicastenango, Guatemala 72
  9. PART TWO. Indigenous Autonomies and Struggles for Gender Justice
  10. 4. Indigenous Autonomies and Gender Justice: Women Dispute Security and Rights in Guerrero, Mexico 97
  11. 5. Gender Inequality, Indigenous Justice, and the Intercultural State: The Case of Chimborazo, Ecuador 120
  12. 6. “Let Us Walk Together”: Chachawarmi Complementarity and Indigenous Autonomies in Bolivia 150
  13. 7. Participate, Make Visible, Propose: The Wager of Indigenous Women in the Organizational Process of the Regional Indigenous Council of Cauca (CRIC) 173
  14. PART THREE. Women’s Alternatives in the Face of Racism and Dispossession
  15. 8. Voices within Silences: Indigenous Women, Security, and Rights in the Mountain Region of Guerrero 197
  16. 9. Grievances and Crevices of Resistance: Maya Women Defy Goldcorp 220
  17. 10. Intersectional Violence: Triqui Women Confront Racism, the State, and Male Leadership 242
  18. PART FOUR. Methodological Perspectives
  19. 11. Methodological Routes: Toward a Critical and Collaborative Legal Anthropology 265
  20. Notes on Contributors 289
  21. Index 291
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