ABSTRACT

This book addresses a growing area of concern for scholars and development practitioners: discriminatory gender norms in legally plural settings. Focusing specifically on indigenous women, this book analyses how they, often in alliance with supporters and allies, have sought to improve their access to justice. Development practitioners working in the field of access to justice have tended to conceive indigenous legal systems as either inherently incompatible with women’s rights or, alternatively, they have emphasised customary law’s advantageous features, such as its greater accessibility, familiarity and effectiveness. Against this background – and based on a comparison of six thus far underexplored initiatives of legal and institutional change in Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia – Anna Barrera Vivero provides a more nuanced, ethnographic, understanding of how women navigate through context-specific constellations of interlegality in their search for justice. In so doing, moreover, her account of ongoing political debates and local struggles for gender justice grounds the elaboration of a comprehensive conceptual framework for understanding the legally plural dynamics involved in the contestation of discriminatory gender norms.

chapter 1|28 pages

Introduction

Indigenous women's hindered access to justice in legally plural settings

chapter 3|56 pages

‘Many women hadn't even thought about what it means to be a woman'

La Calera and La Rinconada, Ecuador

chapter 4|52 pages

‘As if I was sleeping, and then I woke up!'

Chacabamba and Tungasuca, Peru

chapter 5|56 pages

‘Sometimes we as women undervalue ourselves'

Mojocoya and Tarabuco, Bolivia

chapter 6|13 pages

Comparative analysis of case studies

chapter 7|5 pages

Conclusions and implications