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On Their Own Terms: How Cocalera Organizing Expanded Indigenous Women’s Rights in Bolivia

Authors :
Linda Farthing
Thomas Grisaffi
Source :
Latin American Research Review, Vol 59, Pp 785-802 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2024.

Abstract

A key element in the historically unprecedented advances in indigenous women’s political representation under Bolivia’s Evo Morales’s administration (2006–2019) was the influence that women coca growers played in the rural women’s indigenous organization known as the Bartolinas. Driven in no small measure by their resistance to the US-financed War on Drugs in the Chapare region, the cocaleras became both Bolivia’s strongest indigenous women’s organization and its most dedicated advocates for indigenous women’s rights. This article contends that intersectionality—of gender, class, and indigenous identities—is at the heart of understanding indigenous women’s transformation from “helpers” of a male-dominated peasant union to government ministers in the space of ten years. Not only did they effectively deploy chachawarmi, the Andean concept of gender complementarity, to advance their rights in a way consistent with their cultural identity and political loyalties, but they also benefited from the gains of a predominantly urban middle-class feminist movement even though they formally rejected the feminist movement’s composition and perceived orientation.

Details

Language :
English, Spanish; Castilian, Portuguese
ISSN :
15424278
Volume :
59
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Latin American Research Review
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6abd44a155094806851cc23b9da677a6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/lar.2024.14