This chapter provides an overview of Afro-descendant activism in Latin America with specific attention to the situation in Colombia, Costa Rica, Honduras, and Nicaragua. It outlines the forms of structural racism and invisibilization to which Afro-Latin Americans are subjected, and the ways in which activists are attempting to dismantle the forms of disadvantage and discrimination, with a particular focus on media activism. While policies of whitening have been thoroughly discredited and long abandoned, the attitudes associated with them persist, generating a process of internal colonialism and endoracism that exists to this day. The legacy of such prejudices can be seen in ongoing forms of Afro-descendant exclusion and marginalization thro...
[Excerpt] During its second session, the 110th Congress is likely to maintain an interest in the sit...
The multiple inequalities historically experienced by women of African descent in Latin America and ...
In Mexico, blackness is rendered invisible due to the absence of Afrodescendants from nationalist di...
Indigenous people and African descendants in Latin America and the Caribbean have long been affected...
Afro-descendant people make up around 30 per cent of the population of Latin America and the Caribbe...
In a global context especially influenced by the obviousness and the recognition of the multicultura...
The purpose of this article is to show and explore some basic aspects of the situation in which Indi...
Within the framework of the International Decade of People of African Descent, which runs between 20...
Some states have been proactive in ratifying laws that protect ethnic minorities in Latin America an...
Some states have been proactive in ratifying laws that pro-tect ethnic minorities in Latin America a...
This document, a summary of the study “Afrodescendientes y la matriz de la desigualdad social en Amé...
From 1970 to the present, Afro-Latinx (or “Black”) movements have emerged in every country from the ...
This thesis investigates race and Black consciousness in the context of Latin America with a focus o...
The driving force behind this essay is the wave of multiculturalist constitutional and statutory law...
This study examined the historical, political, and societal factors that have led to differing colle...
[Excerpt] During its second session, the 110th Congress is likely to maintain an interest in the sit...
The multiple inequalities historically experienced by women of African descent in Latin America and ...
In Mexico, blackness is rendered invisible due to the absence of Afrodescendants from nationalist di...
Indigenous people and African descendants in Latin America and the Caribbean have long been affected...
Afro-descendant people make up around 30 per cent of the population of Latin America and the Caribbe...
In a global context especially influenced by the obviousness and the recognition of the multicultura...
The purpose of this article is to show and explore some basic aspects of the situation in which Indi...
Within the framework of the International Decade of People of African Descent, which runs between 20...
Some states have been proactive in ratifying laws that protect ethnic minorities in Latin America an...
Some states have been proactive in ratifying laws that pro-tect ethnic minorities in Latin America a...
This document, a summary of the study “Afrodescendientes y la matriz de la desigualdad social en Amé...
From 1970 to the present, Afro-Latinx (or “Black”) movements have emerged in every country from the ...
This thesis investigates race and Black consciousness in the context of Latin America with a focus o...
The driving force behind this essay is the wave of multiculturalist constitutional and statutory law...
This study examined the historical, political, and societal factors that have led to differing colle...
[Excerpt] During its second session, the 110th Congress is likely to maintain an interest in the sit...
The multiple inequalities historically experienced by women of African descent in Latin America and ...
In Mexico, blackness is rendered invisible due to the absence of Afrodescendants from nationalist di...