3 resultados para Raza negra

em Repositorio Académico de la Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica


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Introducción Hace diez años presentamos un informe sobre el estado de la investigación sobre la esclavitud en América latina en la Latin American Reserach Review. Hallamos entonces que se había producido un “considerable progreso” desde 1944, fecha de un estudio similar de James F King. No hay duda de que el interés  de los estudiosos por el tema se ha intensificado aun más rápidamente desde 1966. No se trata simplemente de una mayor cantidad de publicaciones. Mas importante  es que buena parte de estas nuevas contribuciones reflejan la calidad científica marcadamente superior.

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ResumenIntenta explicar cómo Subtiava logró resistir el avance de la ladinización y del capitalismo agrario y sobrevivir como comunidad indígena, mientras que la mayoría de los indios nicaragüenses se convirtieron en ladinos.AbstractThe author explains how the town of Subtiava was able to resist the process of “ladinización” and the advances of agrarian capitalism to survive as an indian community, while the majority of Nicaraguan indians became “ladinos”.

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This text questions what it means to be black women in the context of inequity and the multiple forms of violence suffered in Colombian society. It argues that the analysis on black women situation, gender categories are insufficient. Instead, it declares as necessary an analysis that also articulates categories such as ethnicity / race, class, and sexual orientation, questioning these categories while at the same time giving new significance from the specific experiences of women and black communities are given. The text places in tension a universalistic view of feminism and the traditional left. It also explores the reasons for the poverty of the black population especially in the Colombian Pacific region, the institutional emergence of women´s organizations in the same region an examines the "ethnization" of Pacific communities in the context of regulation of article 55 of the Constitution of 1991. Finally, the article ends by showing how oppression has many faces for the black population, especially for black women.