Other
Spanish
ID: <
10670/1.8jc2kh>
Abstract
Indigenous migration is a strategy of dispossession, as Gonzales Casanova would denounce, which leads many indigenous women to face structural and symbolic violence when migrating outside their territory, or in the case of remaining in their localities, they are exposed to situations of extreme violence and social exclusion, as logic of domination. The ethnographic methodology allowed us to recover stories of indigenous women and men who promote human rights in the municipality of Ocosingo-southern Mexico, in the face of their experiences and practices related to migration; phenomenon that affects men and women differently.