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  1. Women and Social Movements in Latin America: Power from Below.Lynn Stephen - 1997 - University of Texas Press.
    Women and Social Movements in Latin America covers a wide array of issues, from the progression of feminist politics in Latin America to the country specific conditions which give rise to diverse women's organisations.
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  • The Politics of Gender, Human Rights, and Being Indigenous in Chile.Patricia Richards - 2005 - Gender and Society 19 (2):199-220.
    Although the universal human rights paradigm has been problematic for women and indigenous peoples, both groups have made advances by framing their demands within a human rights perspective. Indigenous women, however, have frequently found themselves marginalized by women’s movements and indigenous movements alike, particularly when they make demands for rights as indigenous women—not just as members of one group or the other. This article takes the case of Mapuche women in Chile to examine the politics of gender and human rights (...)
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  • "Viva": Women and Popular Protest in Latin America.Sarah A. Radcliffe & Sallie Westwood - 1993
    Latin America has experienced revolution, dictatorship and military administration. Through their active involvement in reformist movements, women are beginning to be seen as integral to the process of democratization. Their growing political role is explored in this text.
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  • From structural subordination to empowerment:: Women and development in third world contexts.Christine E. Bose & Edna Acosta-belén - 1990 - Gender and Society 4 (3):299-320.
    This article argues that the condition of women in Third World societies cannot be separated from the colonial experience since the power relationships that were established during the colonial era between Europe and its territories, and between women and men, have not varied significantly and are still recreated through contemporary mechanisms. For example, development projects promoted by Western countries to modernize the Third World have, in the long run, better served their own interests than those of their intended beneficiaries. As (...)
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  • Revolutionary popular feminism in nicaragua:: Articulating class, gender, and national sovereignty.Norma Stoltz Chinchilla - 1990 - Gender and Society 4 (3):370-397.
    On March 8, 1987, the Sandinista Liberation Front published its statement on the relation of women's struggles to the Nicaraguan revolution. The author argues that this official statement is consistent with the views of modern feminists on some key points relating to the need to eliminate women's double day, promote women's self-organization, and wage an ideological struggle against sexism if women's subordination is to be eliminated. The author believes that the Sandinista Front's emphasis on ideological struggle and political organization represents (...)
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  • Triangulation revisited: Strategy of validation or alternative?Uwe Flick - 1992 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 22 (2):175–197.
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