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dc.contributor.authorHartviksen, Julia
dc.contributor.editorSatija, Shivani
dc.date.accessioned2023-06-08T14:50:06Z
dc.date.available2023-06-08T14:50:06Z
dc.date.issued2023-05-23
dc.identifier.issn1355-2074
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2023.2167633
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10546/621515
dc.description<html> <head> <title></title> </head> <body> <p>In 1996, Guatemala&#8217;s Peace Accords were signed, concluding 36 years of war and genocide. However, persisting violence, including violences against women (VAW) and criminalisation of human rights defenders protesting inequalities provoked by postwar extractivism, threatens the democracy promised through formal peace. Specifically, women human rights defenders (WHRDs) play key roles in these struggles, which this paper explores. Drawing on ten months of qualitative fieldwork in Maya Q&#8217;eqchi&#8217; communities in the Northern Transversal Strip (FTN) region, I ask: what roles do WHRDs play in resolving VAW and in challenging gendered and environmental injustices? Secondly, what political and collective strategies are drawn on by WHRDs; what challenges do they face; and what movements and processes do they engage in, to envision a better future? This paper foregrounds the intersections of municipal political spaces and a constellation of postwar women&#8217;s rights legal frameworks, including a 2008 Law on Femicide criminalising all forms of VAW as central to WHRDs&#8217; mobilisations. I explore how locally elected members of consejos de mujeres (women&#8217;s councils) and municipal oficinas de la mujer (women&#8217;s offices) offer important spaces for WHRDs to organise collectively. I also highlight connections between WHRDs&#8217; struggles against VAW, extractivism, and environmental devastation in the FTN. Simultaneously, I identify several &#8216;roadblocks&#8217; to WHRDs&#8217; engagement in these spaces and the dangers and criminalisation they face. Ultimately, such &#8216;roadblocks&#8217; contribute to a vernacularisation of women&#8217;s rights in the FTN, which instrumentalises and empowers the language of rights for WHRDs&#8217; struggles.</p> </body> </html>en_US
dc.format.extent20en_US
dc.language.isoEnglishen_US
dc.publisherOxfam KEDVen_US
dc.publisherOxfam Indiaen_US
dc.publisherOxfam Mexicoen_US
dc.publisherOxfam Colombiaen_US
dc.publisherOxfam South Africaen_US
dc.publisherOxfam Brazilen_US
dc.publisherRoutledgeen_US
dc.relation.urlhttp://policy-practice.oxfam.org.uk/publications/roadblocks-on-the-ruta-de-denuncia-negotiating-womens-rights-and-resisting-viol-621515
dc.subjectGenderen_US
dc.titleRoadblocks on the ruta de denuncia: negotiating women’s rights and resisting violences in postwar Guatemala’s Northern Transversal Stripen_US
dc.typeJournal articleen_US
dc.identifier.eissn1364-9221
dc.identifier.journalGender & Developmenten_US
oxfam.signoff.statusFor public use. Can be shared outside Oxfamen_US
oxfam.subject.countryGuatemalaen_US
oxfam.subject.keywordViolence against womenen_US
oxfam.subject.keywordwomen’s rightsen_US
oxfam.subject.keywordvernacularisationen_US
oxfam.subject.keywordextractivismen_US
oxfam.subject.keywordwomen human rights defendersen_US
prism.issuenameWomen human rights defendersen_US
prism.number1en_US
prism.volume31en_US


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