Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://dspace.udla.edu.ec/handle/33000/5972
Tipo de material : bachelorThesis
Título : Género y etnia: una mirada hacia la participación política de las mujeres indígenas en el Ecuador, en los períodos legislativos de 1998 y 2009
Autor : León Andrade, Daniela Alejandra
Tutor : Jervis Pastor, María Paz
Palabras clave : PARTICIPACIÓN POLÍTICA;MUJERES INDÍGENAS;ECUADOR
Fecha de publicación : 2016
Editorial : Quito: Universidad de las Américas, 2016
Citación : León Andrade, D. A. (2016). Género y etnia: una mirada hacia la participación política de las mujeres indígenas en el Ecuador, en los períodos legislativos de 1998 y 2009. (Tesis de pregrado). Universidad de las Américas, Quito.
Resumen : El presente trabajo de investigación recorre diferentes conceptos para analizar la participación política de las mujeres indígenas en el Ecuador, basándose en dos períodos legislativos: 1998 y 2009...
Descripción : The following research paper uses diverse theories and concepts in order to analyze the political participation of indigenous women based on two legislative periods that are essential in the political history of Ecuador: 1998 and 2009. The objective of this comparison is to conclude if there has been a political incidence of indigenous women in the legislative. In the first section, the theory of intersectionality is analyzed and is vital to explain the triple discrimination of indigenous women as a result of their gender, ethnicity and socio-economic class. In addition, the differences between the concept of gender from an indigenous worldview and from a western view are established. Furthermore, this idea is then studied in the legislative period of 1998 in where indigenous movements and women marked a milestone by being recognized by the new Constitution and simultaneously, indigenous women attempted unsuccessfully to include a gender agenda within these organizations. Afterwards, the analysis takes on the legislative period of 2009 that was also characterized by a political and social crisis, which resulted in the creation of a new Constitution and a different legislative branch. For the first time and due to the demands from indigenous women‟s movements, the Constitution integrated the importance of women in the indigenous judicial system. As a result, the low percentage of indigenous women representatives in the legislature proved to show that they are more excluded than just women, due to the fact that the dominant structures of society limit their access to decision-making positions. Two of the possible causes are maldistribution of economy and misrecognition. In conclusion, the advances in recognition and representation of indigenous women are more possible when they opt for empowering gender from an indigenous worldview and not outside of it.
URI : http://dspace.udla.edu.ec/handle/33000/5972
Aparece en las colecciones: Licenciatura en Ciencias Políticas y Relaciones Internacionales

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