Skip to main content
  • Main Menu
  • Utility Menu
  • Search
University Logo
HARVARD.EDU

Indigenous Peoples, Gender Justice, and Legal Pluralism in the United States, Mexico, and Guatemala

Exploratory Seminar at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study

September 8-9, 2016

  • Schedule
  • Biographies
  • Recent Articles from Seminar Participants
  • Presentation Materials
  • Logistical Information
  • About the Radcliffe Institute
HOME /

Recent Articles from Seminar Participants

Rosalva Aída Hernández-Castillo
Multiple Injustices: Indigenous Women, Law and Political Struggle in Latin America

Morna Macleod
Development or Devastation?: Epistemologies of Mayan Women’s Resistance to an Open-Pit Goldmine in Guatemala

Mariana Mora
La Criminalización de la Pobreza y los Efectos Estatales de Seguridad Neoliberal: Reflexiones Desde la Montaña, Guerrero

Rachel Sieder
Legal Pluralism and Indigenous Women’s Rights in Mexico: the Ambiguities of Recognition

María Teresa Sierra
Justicia de Género y Pluralidades Legales: Perspectivas Latinoamericanas y Africanas
Indigenous Autonomies and Gender Justice: Women’s dispute for Security and Rights in Guerrero, Mexico

Shannon Speed
States of Violence: Indigenous Women Migrants in the Era of Neoliberal Multicriminalism

Lynn Stephen
Gendered Transborder Violence in the Expanded United States-Mexico Borderlands

Margo Tamez
Diálogo, Volume 19, Number 1, Spring 2016 "Indigenous Women’s Rivered Refusals in El Calaboz", pp. 7-21 | DOI: 10.1353/dlg.2016.0030 Margo Tamez 

Kimberly Theidon
Hidden in Plain Sight: Children Born of Wartime Sexual Violence

Irma Alicia Velásquez Nimatuj
El Genocidio Frente a la Historia y la Memoria

John Willshire Carrera
A “Child-Centered Approach” to Asylum Claims of Children Fleeing the Central American Triangle

Admin Login
OpenScholar
Copyright © 2022 The President and Fellows of Harvard College | Accessibility | Digital Accessibility | Report Copyright Infringement