Rosalva Aida Hernandez Castillo
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Demanding Justice and Security
Indigenous Women and Legal Pluralities in Latin America
Edited by Rachel Sieder
Rutgers University Press
The contributors to this book analyze Latin American indigenous women’s engagements with different legal forums and language to secure greater justice and security, and aim to set out a series of key concepts and issues for analyzing these mobilizations, in order to present innovative, engaged research on constructions of justice and security.
- Copyright year: 2017
Engaged Observer
Anthropology, Advocacy, and Activism
Edited by Victoria Sanford and Asale Angel-Ajani; By Asale Angel-Ajani, Victoria Sanford, Phillippe Bourgois, Irina Carlota Silber, Rosalva Aida Hernandez Castillo, Dr. Monique Skidmore, Shannon Speed, Dana-Ain Davis, Michael Bosia, Roberta Culbertson, John Collins, Aldo Civico, and Kay Warren; Foreword by Phillippe Bourgois
Rutgers University Press
Anthropology has long been associated with an ethos of “engagement.” The field’s core methods and practices involve long-term interpersonal contact between researchers and their study participants, giving major research topics in the field a distinctively human face. Can research findings be authentic and objective? Are anthropologists able to use their data to aid the participants of their study, and is that aid always welcome?
- Copyright year: 2006
Demanding Justice and Security
Indigenous Women and Legal Pluralities in Latin America
Edited by Rachel Sieder
Rutgers University Press
The contributors to this book analyze Latin American indigenous women’s engagements with different legal forums and language to secure greater justice and security, and aim to set out a series of key concepts and issues for analyzing these mobilizations, in order to present innovative, engaged research on constructions of justice and security.
- Copyright year: 2017
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