Bulletin #21 (Trans)Border

 Bulletin #21 (Trans)Border

CLACSO Working Group on Migration and South-South Borders
(Trans)Border Bulletin
Year 4 – Number #21 Migrations and feminisms. Part Two
March-April 2024

CONTENTS

  1. Presentation
    Carolina Aguilar Román
  2. The construction of migrant feminisms in Chile
    Vanessa González Peña
  3. Intersectionality and gender as analytical tools for understanding the feminization of migrations in Abya Yala
    Anabella Isabel López Arévalo
  4. The necessary gender analysis in the Mexican Migration Law
    Luisa Gabriela Morales Vega
  5. Migrant women. Dramas, knowledge and survival strategies
    Liane Chipollino Aseff
  6. Caring means migrating. Experiences of Central American women in transit through Mexico's southern border
    Sandra Karina De la Cruz Trujillo
  7. Cross-border domestic workers. Home in Mexico and employment in the United States
    Karen Muro Aréchiga
  8. Care work as a form of migrant (re)existence in the city of São Paulo
    Florence Salmuni
  9. Twenty-nine years as “The Hope of the Migrant”
    Alejandra Uribe Aguirre
  10. The life force of dissident migrants in the face of the heteropatriarchal, capitalist and colonial system
    Kenya Berenice Ortiz Cadena
  11. Beyond borders. LGBT migrants in the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires: challenges, disappointments and hopes
    Ramiro N. Pérez Ripossio
  12. Coyote smuggling: an apology for patriarchal violence
    Tamara Segura Herrera
  13. Chamas in Action. Empowering refugee and migrant adolescents from a feminist perspective
    Beatriz Cordova
    Gianina Márquez
  14. Menstruation and care in spaces for the care of people in mobility
    April Rossana Páez Rosano
    Mariana González Magaña
    Dana Maya Chong
    Mónica Díaz Cardozo
    David Arturo Sánchez Garduño
  15. Call for contributions. (Trans)border Bulletin #22 Identities and Mobilities in the Processes of Popular Globalization in Latin America
  16. Editorial policy. (Trans)border Bulletin CLACSO Working Group on Migration and South-South Borders