The Guatemalan government I s counter insurgency campaigns of the 1980's resulted in the deliberate assassination of more than one hundred thousand people and the enforced exile of more than fifty thousand Guatemalans. In exile, Guatemalan refugees faced not only their memories of their violent past but also structured radical changes in their way of life. The restrictions placed upon them by living in United Nations sponsored camps transformed household economies and constrained refugees in multiethnic compounds
Abstract: This paper, based on broader discussions surrounding gender violence and immigration in th...
This paper explores the often-undervalued role of gender in transitional justice mechanisms and the ...
Drawing on 12 months of fieldwork conducted in Guatemala's Metropolitan Area among indigenous and la...
Spanning 1982-1985, the Counterinsurgency War was the violent period of the county's thirty-six year...
Since 1982, approximately 46,000 Guatemalans, mainly indigenous peasants, have been living as docume...
Since 1982, approximately 46,000 Guatemalans, mainly indigenous peasants, have been living as docume...
The purpose of this research is to provide a brief historical context of the 36 years of civil war i...
In an ethnographic study conducted from August 1993-November 1995, I examined the effects of sociopo...
This paper explores the often-undervalued role of gender in transitional justice mechanisms and the ...
This article examines the structural gender violence suffered by Guatemalan indigenous women and gir...
Despite vast research on emigration and Latin America, little has been done on women and families wh...
A decade after the 1996 Peace Accords that marked the end of the 36-year internal armed conflict, Gu...
Stratification of women in Guatemalan society is the subject of this program. It examines the submis...
This study is about the relationship between violence, memory and identity. It focuses on a communit...
Following the 1996 peace accord, which ended 36 years of civil conflict, Guatemalans have been strug...
Abstract: This paper, based on broader discussions surrounding gender violence and immigration in th...
This paper explores the often-undervalued role of gender in transitional justice mechanisms and the ...
Drawing on 12 months of fieldwork conducted in Guatemala's Metropolitan Area among indigenous and la...
Spanning 1982-1985, the Counterinsurgency War was the violent period of the county's thirty-six year...
Since 1982, approximately 46,000 Guatemalans, mainly indigenous peasants, have been living as docume...
Since 1982, approximately 46,000 Guatemalans, mainly indigenous peasants, have been living as docume...
The purpose of this research is to provide a brief historical context of the 36 years of civil war i...
In an ethnographic study conducted from August 1993-November 1995, I examined the effects of sociopo...
This paper explores the often-undervalued role of gender in transitional justice mechanisms and the ...
This article examines the structural gender violence suffered by Guatemalan indigenous women and gir...
Despite vast research on emigration and Latin America, little has been done on women and families wh...
A decade after the 1996 Peace Accords that marked the end of the 36-year internal armed conflict, Gu...
Stratification of women in Guatemalan society is the subject of this program. It examines the submis...
This study is about the relationship between violence, memory and identity. It focuses on a communit...
Following the 1996 peace accord, which ended 36 years of civil conflict, Guatemalans have been strug...
Abstract: This paper, based on broader discussions surrounding gender violence and immigration in th...
This paper explores the often-undervalued role of gender in transitional justice mechanisms and the ...
Drawing on 12 months of fieldwork conducted in Guatemala's Metropolitan Area among indigenous and la...