In this thesis I explore the prevalence of violence against women in Guatemala. Violence is considered a part of everyday life because it has become normalized. By normal" I refer to both the frequency of the act and its perceived legitimacy. Due to this normalization, much violence is considered something women should simply endure. Although women suffer different types of violence, I argue that they must be seen within the same framework and I show how violence in public and private sphere cannot be separated. Violent practices have become normatively supported, largely based on gender expectations, such as women's morality. Gender inequalities have not only enabled normalization, but to a large degree societal acceptance of violence. The...
This thesis analyses the increasingly difficult situation for the Nicaraguan women‟s movement after ...
In response to rates of violence against women that rank among the highest in the world, Guatemala e...
This essay is based on a photovoice project conducted in Guatemala City from January to May 2013 wit...
In this thesis I explore the prevalence of violence against women in Guatemala. Violence is consider...
Drawing on 12 months of fieldwork conducted in Guatemala's Metropolitan Area among indigenous and la...
The article examines the legal framework for addressing violence against women in post war Guatemala...
High levels of violence against women and impunity in Guatemala have reached crisis proportions and ...
This interdisciplinary thesis is grounded in forensic anthropology, feminist geography, and the viol...
In Guatemala, impunity for the battering and killing of women is at such levels that perpetrators ri...
Feminist geographic analysis has demonstrated that violence inflicted on women is embodied, experien...
This report examines the underlying conditions that cause women like Rodi to flee their home countri...
This thesis explores gendered violence in ‘post war’ Guatemala and critically examines the responses...
This paper analyzes the role of the Guatemalan government in reducing the rates of violence against ...
In 2009 Guatemalan women experienced the highest level of violence in Latin America and one of the h...
Following the signing of Guatemala’s 1996 Peace Accords, which brought an end to 36 years of conflic...
This thesis analyses the increasingly difficult situation for the Nicaraguan women‟s movement after ...
In response to rates of violence against women that rank among the highest in the world, Guatemala e...
This essay is based on a photovoice project conducted in Guatemala City from January to May 2013 wit...
In this thesis I explore the prevalence of violence against women in Guatemala. Violence is consider...
Drawing on 12 months of fieldwork conducted in Guatemala's Metropolitan Area among indigenous and la...
The article examines the legal framework for addressing violence against women in post war Guatemala...
High levels of violence against women and impunity in Guatemala have reached crisis proportions and ...
This interdisciplinary thesis is grounded in forensic anthropology, feminist geography, and the viol...
In Guatemala, impunity for the battering and killing of women is at such levels that perpetrators ri...
Feminist geographic analysis has demonstrated that violence inflicted on women is embodied, experien...
This report examines the underlying conditions that cause women like Rodi to flee their home countri...
This thesis explores gendered violence in ‘post war’ Guatemala and critically examines the responses...
This paper analyzes the role of the Guatemalan government in reducing the rates of violence against ...
In 2009 Guatemalan women experienced the highest level of violence in Latin America and one of the h...
Following the signing of Guatemala’s 1996 Peace Accords, which brought an end to 36 years of conflic...
This thesis analyses the increasingly difficult situation for the Nicaraguan women‟s movement after ...
In response to rates of violence against women that rank among the highest in the world, Guatemala e...
This essay is based on a photovoice project conducted in Guatemala City from January to May 2013 wit...