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Ni una menos

Ni una menos (Spanish: [ni ˈuna ˈmenos]; Spanish for "Not one [woman] less") is a Latin American fourth-wave[1][2] grassroots[3] feminist movement, which started in Argentina and has spread across several Latin American countries, that campaigns against gender-based violence. This mass mobilization comes as a response to various systemic issues that proliferate violence against women. In its official website, Ni una menos defines itself as a "collective scream against machista violence."[4] The campaign was started by a collective of Argentine female artists, journalists and academics, and has grown into "a continental alliance of feminist forces".[5] Social media was an essential factor in the propagation of the Ni Una Menos movement to other countries and regions. The movement regularly holds protests against femicides, but has also touched on topics such as gender roles, sexual harassment, gender pay gap, sexual objectification, legality of abortion, sex workers' rights and transgender rights.

Ni una menos
Formation2015
TypeSocial movement
Location
  • Argentina
Websiteniunamenos.org.ar

The collective takes its name from a 1995 phrase by Mexican poet and activist Susana Chávez, "Ni una muerta más" (Spanish for "Not one more [woman] dead"), in protest to the female homicides in Ciudad Juárez. Chávez herself was assassinated in 2011, moment in which the phrase became a "symbol of struggle".[6][7]

Context for movement origin edit

Latin America has incredibly high rates of femicide, or feminicide; at least 12 women suffer from gender-based violence daily. Additionally, 14 out of the 25 countries with the highest rates of gender-based violence can be found in Latin America.[8] The primary age group that is a victim of this sort of violence are young women aged 15–29.[9] Gender-based violence can be described as diverse tactics to keep women in a subordinate position in society.[10] The actual conditions and methods to exert violence can vary greatly. For example, they can range from murder in a civil war environment to being slapped in an otherwise peaceful home. Furthermore, defining victims of feminicide is slightly distinct from female victims of homicide. For a case to be classified as femicide, victims are killed because of their gender.[11] Nevertheless, this statistic may be higher and more nuanced because collecting accurate data is difficult. This pattern creates more barriers to institutionalizing practices that may protect women from gender-based violence.[8]

A factor that influences the prevalence of gender-based violence in Latin America is gender inequality. In Latin America, women are often more socially and economically disadvantaged compared to women in North America and Western Europe.[12] This may perpetuate dynamics where women are more likely to remain in relationships where they are experiencing abuse or violence.

Furthermore, many feminists point to institutional violence as a factor that proliferates more gender-based violence and femicide. They cite impunity for men within legal institutions as a mechanism that impedes women from achieving justice.[13] They argue that the legal system is built so that women face barriers or are improperly protected from violence. Researchers have concluded that the level of impunity in a country is an accurate predictor of higher rates of femicide.[13]

On the other hand, toxic masculinity, or machismo, is very prevalent in Latin America. These concepts refer to the notion that men are stronger than women and must assert control in order to protect them. However, they often incorporate an aggressive and exaggerated assertion of masculinity that can translate into a propensity for gender-based discrimination and gender-based violence.[11]

Lastly, gender-based violence is more common in areas that are more prone to cartel and gang violence. Violence against the female body is used as a tool to assert control and dominance.[14] Furthermore, as cartels expand they begin to delve into practices beyond drugs, including sexual exploitation and trafficking.[15] Moreover, it reiterates ideas of machismo and consequent female submissiveness. These patterns are prevalent in Latin America due to the amount of drug and cartel violence. In Central America, around 600,000 people are internally displaced due to gang violence.[14] On the other hand, levels of violence across the region have been increasing in the past couple of years.[16]

Across Latin America edit

Argentina edit

 
Ni Una Menos protest in Argentina in 2018. The green handkerchiefs are typically used to signal support for abortion legalization[17]

The Ni Una Menos movement was born in Argentina. The protest was organized after the murder of 14-year-old Chiara Paez, found buried underneath her boyfriend's house on May 11, 2015, because she wanted to keep the baby and he did not, so he beat her to death when she was a few weeks pregnant.[18] They were able to mobilize 200,000 people in Buenos Aires alone.[19] The movement was iterated as opposition to femicide and violence against women, but did not discuss more controversial topics originally.[20] The name Ni Una Menos can be roughly translated to "Not One [Woman] Less." This refers to not wanting any more women to die as a result of gender-based violence. The movement became nationally recognized with the use of the hashtag #NiUnaMenos on social media, title under which massive demonstrations were held on June 3, 2015, having the Palace of the Argentine National Congress as a main meeting point.[20] Since the first #NiUnaMenos in 2015, demonstrations take place every year in Argentina on June 3. Furthermore, the movement has continued to expand to other countries and regions due to its strong digital presence.[21] The transnational spread through the use of social media after the movement's birth in Argentina has allowed for different places to adapt to their local needs while maintaining a sense of solidarity.

On October 19, 2016 the Ni una menos collective organized a first-ever women mass strike in Argentina, in response to the murder of 16-year-old Lucía Pérez, who was raped and impaled in the coastal city of Mar del Plata.[22][23] It consisted of a one-hour pause from work and study early in the afternoon, with protesters dressed in mourning for what was known as Miércoles negro (Spanish for "Black Wednesday"). These protests became region-wide and gave the movement a greater international momentum, with street demonstrations also taking place in Chile, Peru, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico and Spain.[24][25]

As a direct result of Ni Una Menos protests, the Registry of Femicides and the Centre for the Registration, Systematisation, and Monitoring of Feminicides were created to keep a better record of gender-based violence. The government also established the Ministry for Women, Gender, and Diversity.[26] Moreover, Ni Una Menos protests in Argentina are credited as a catalyst for the legalization of first-trimester elective abortion on December 30, 2020.[27] The movement drifted from their original mission to combat violence against women and adopted abortion rights as a key issue in the movement. The vastness of the protests caused abortion to become a salient topic in the Argentine legislature and caused more people to support its legalization.[28]

Peru edit

 
Ni Una Menos protest in Peru.

In Peru, over 30% of women report suffering physical violence at the hands of a spouse in their lifetime.[29] Further, in a 2006 World Health Organization survey, they found that Peru had the highest rates of violence in the region with 61% reporting violence experiencing violence at the hands of an intimate partner.[30] The NiUnaMenos (Peru) movement was sparked in July 2016 when Adriano Pozo Arias, a known abuser, was released from jail. A video captures him attacking his girlfriend, Cindy Arlette Contreras Bautista. He was convicted and sent to jail but only served a one-year sentence. Another case that impulsed Peruvians into action was when Ronny Garcia beat Lady Guillen.[31] The resulting protest on August 13, 2016 has been recognized as the largest protest in Peruvian history with hundreds of thousands of people in attendance in Lima.[32] People were mobilized and the march's logistics were planned over Facebook as tensions and frustrations about high levels of feminicide and the lack of a strong state response to this issue increased.[31] There have been subsequent Ni Una Menos marches in Peru on 2017[33] and 2018.[34]

In Peru, there has been considerable backlash against the adoption of abortion rights as an issue Ni Una Menos is championing for. Cardinal Juan Luis Cipriani, a prominent religious leader condemned the legalization of abortion in cases of child rape and the expansion of sex education courses in schools.[35] He has even organized counterprotests to proliferate his opposing, more conservative beliefs.

Mexico edit

Historically, Mexico has been a country with one the highest femicide rates in Latin America. From the years 2015-2021, Mexico had a 135% increase of femicide, going from 427 victims to a little above 1,000 victims. [36] In Mexico, the Ni Una Menos movement has been observed to be prevalent and active. While there have been many street demonstrations following the Ni Una Menos movement in Mexico, there was a bigger nationwide strike and Ni Una Menos protest on March 9, 2020. This protest consisted of women only staying home, meaning women didn’t go to school, work, or any public place. This nationwide strike was carried out due to the lack of government involvement and cooperation to address and handle femicide, domestic violence, and other issues. Albeit, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Ni Una Menos demonstrations or organizing were deterred, and femicide cases during the pandemic continued to increase.[36] However, recently, a few efforts have been seen by the Mexican government to address some of these concerns. For example, there is a prosecutor’s office that is dedicated to gender crimes, including femicides.[36] Nevertheless, femicide is still an ongoing issue and a tragic reality for many women in Mexico, and other countries across Latin America.[36]

Puerto Rico edit

In 2018, Puerto Rico reported high rates of femicide, with an estimated femicide per week on average. In 2020, Puerto Rico reported 60 femicide cases. Moreover, Puerto Rico declared a state of emergency against gender-based violence and femicide in January 2021.[37] Despite declaring a state of emergency against gender-based violence, femicide rates continued. Within the same year, the news of the killings of two femicide cases in Puerto Rico was widespread and as a result, they received a lot of national attention and a big turnout for the Ni Una Menos demonstration on May 2, 2021.[38]These cases were the cases of Andrea Ruiz Costas and Keishla Rodríguez Ortiz. Andrea Ruiz Costas was killed by her abusive ex-boyfriend in April 2021, after the court rejected the protection order she filed against him. Days later, on May 1st, the body of Keishla Rodríguez Ortiz was found in the San Jose Lagoon, located next to the San Juan’s Teodoro Moscoso Bridge, where the demonstration took place. Keishla was pregnant when her famous boxer boyfriend, Felix Verdejo, killed her.[38] As a result, activists and other Puerto Rican civilians took to the San Juan Teodoro Moscoso Bridge to protest against femicide and to call for justice for these victims. Hundreds of people showed up to the demonstration and shut down the bridge, stopping traffic and usage of the bridge. Protestors had signs with “Ni Una Menos” written on them and cars that blocked the lanes with the same phrase written on them. These protestors advocated for and preached the slogan, aligning themselves with the movement, as they were calling for an end to gender-based violence and femicide.[38]

The Impact of the Ni Una Menos Movement Within Other Movements edit

The Green Tide edit

While the Ni Una Menos movement is broader and extensive, this movement has inspired and has been incorporated or infused within other movements. This is seen in the Green Tide movement. The Green Tide movement refers to the movement in Latin America that fights for reproductive justice such as the legalization of abortion, which is heavily promoted through the usage of green bandanas or green scarves. The green bandanas were originally a symbol that represented the right to legalized abortions used by the National Campaign for Legal, Safe, and Free Abortion. This campaign is a campaign from Argentina that presented a bill in 2003, calling for the legalization of abortion, however, they had no luck in passing it.[39] While the symbol and representation behind the green scarf were first started by the National Campaign for Legal, Safe, and Free Abortion, the Ni Una Menos movement is what popularized it and spread the symbol across Latin America. Many Ni Una Menos protests and demonstrations in Latin America are accompanied by green bandanas/ scarves. Along with these green pañuelos or bandanas, were many chants, such as the chant “Las ricas abortan, las pobres mueren”, meaning the rich women abort, while the poor women die, highlighting the injustices and disproportionate inequalities that affect poor women due to the inaccessibility to a legal abortion.[39] Although the Ni Una Menos movement’s prime objective is to fight against femicide and domestic abuse, general women’s rights such as the right to an abortion were heavily integrated into the movement. With many Ni Una Menos protests accompanied by the green scarves and the green movement, on December 30, 2020, abortion of up to 14 weeks of pregnancy was legalized in Argentina, the heart and origin of the movement.[39] The presence of the Green Tide due to the Ni Una Menos movement was seen in many Latin American countries, such as Mexico, and as a result, curated law changes in favor of the movement's ideals. In September 2021, the Mexican Supreme Court declared that abortions would no longer be criminalized. Furthermore, every year on September 28, International Safe Abortion Day, and March 8, International Women’s Day, cities across Latin America become visually green, as they are filled with green pañuelos and green bandana demonstrations, showing the impact of the green tide that was preached by the Ni Una Menos movement.[39]

Justicia para Nuestras Hijas edit

Another movement that incorporates Ni Una Menos values is the organization, Justicia para Nuestras Hijas, or Justice for Our Daughters. Justicia para Nuestras Hijas is an activist group that advocates for the rights and justice of femicide victims in Chihuahua, Mexico. This group is made up of family members and activists who seek justice for their daughters and want an end to femicide in Mexico. Due to the lack of proper investigation and government negligence, this organization conducts its own investigations to acquire justice for femicide victims or missing women.[40] When there are public demonstrations or protests on the streets by this group, they carry a pink cross as their symbol. On this pink cross is the phrase “Ni Una Menos”. This group carries on the message and incorporates the values of the Ni Unas Menos movement as the movement fights against femicide.[40]

Diversity edit

The Ni Una Menos has been a welcoming movement that has created a safe space for people of many different intersectionalities. The movement's diversity encourages younger generations to join the movement regardless of their backgrounds and identities. The movement's diversity also plays into part in why it has been successful and why it has been so widespread across Latin America. The inclusion and welcoming of Black, indigenous, trans, and queer women has allowed the movement to gain a lot of support and followers. The movement is not limited to one identity or one certain woman but instead accounts for many women and the many intersectionalities that encompass Latin America.[41][42]While other movements such as the #MeToo movement are critiqued by feminist scholars, such as Angela Davis, for the lack of inclusion and taking into account structural issues such as race, the Ni Una Menos movement acknowledges structural issues such as race and gender in society.[42] By using intersectional feminism, the Ni Una Menos movement is able to address issues affecting women with a broader perspective and can connect issues such as femicide to other gender and racial issues prevalent in society.[42]

The Queer Community edit

While it is not exactly clear where the Ni Una Menos collective stands with queer rights, queer issues, and other related issues, the Ni Una Menos is known to be an intersectional and welcoming movement where the LGBTQ+ community is embraced and active in Ni Una Menos demonstrations, aligning themselves with an LGBTQ+ rights agenda.[35][43] For example, in 2018, the Ni Una Menos movement organized a global stance against patriarchy that was called the “Orgasmarathon”. This event was an international and global orgasm that intended to include and preach for the necessities and aspirations of feminists and the LGBTQ+ community.[43] This event was spread on social media to reach international participation, where women from wherever they were located, were encouraged to engage in self-pleasure and be a part of what was explained to be a “sexual revolution” by the Ni Una Menos collective, whilst embracing different sexualities and identities within the broader Ni Una Menos movement. This event occurred on the same day as the 2018 International Women’s Strike, on March 8 at midnight.[43]

Beyond Latin America edit

United States edit

 
#MeToo sign at the 2018 Women's March in New York

The Ni Una Menos movement expressed itself as the large scale #MeToo Movement in the United States. Their missions are somewhat different since MeToo focuses on calling out perpetrators of sexual assault and harassment in positions of power, while Ni Una Menos pays more attention to femicide specifically. They share themes of improving the situation of violence against women and secured much of their support from social media. Moreover, #MeToo has collaborated with Ni Una Menos as they did for the International Women's Strike in 2017.[44][45] They have also pointed to Ni Una Menos as an inspiration to their activism. The #MeToo Movement began in 2017, a couple of years after the first protest in Argentina and the movement had begun to spread throughout the rest of South America and the Caribbean. It was a reaction to Harvey Weinstein's continued inappropriate sexual behavior.[46] Several actresses, including Alyssa Milano, took to social media to denounce Weinstein. They also encouraged other women to share experiences within the same industry with other perpetrators. This initiative expanded to other industries and people in power within them. The purpose of the movement was for women to find solidarity, support, and a safe space to share their stories of sexual assault and harassment.[47] The phrase "Me Too" was originally coined by Tarana Burke in 2007 to encourage survivors to speak out. However, it became more mainstream once it reached social media in 2017.[48]  

Criticism and Backlash edit

The basis of the Ni Una Menos movement is that women face disproportionate violence due to their gender. Some critics counter this assertion with the fact that in aggregate men face more violence than women.[49] Some respond to this by reframing feminicide as an effect of a patriarchal society that has negative consequences for everybody that lives within it. Meanwhile, others simply reject the movement.

 
Milagro Sala, a controversial figure in Argentine social and political spheres that brings critiques to the Ni Una Menos movement.

On the other hand, Ni Una Menos strategically establishes itself as a movement against gender based violence. While many members of the movement champion for other aspects of women's liberation, such as abortion rights and LGBTQ+ rights, the movement has not adopted an official position for either of these.[35] However, there still are strong indicators that the rise of the Ni Una Menos movement facilitated the abortion legalization process in Argentina.[28] Conservative and religious sectors across Latin America have opposed the overlap between people that support the Ni Una Menos movement and these other rights.

The movement has been criticized by some journalists, especially since 2017, for some of its demands, such as the freedom of Milagro Sala in Argentina.[50] Sala is an indigenous Qulla politician and social leader who was convicted for 13 years in prison for fraud, extortion, and illicit association. Some Ni Una Menos activists believe that she was wrongly arrested for political purposes. She and her arrest are controversial topics in Argentine public discourse.

See also edit

References edit

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  50. ^ . El Intransigente (in Spanish). Infobae. 5 June 2017. Archived from the original on 12 October 2017. Retrieved 25 June 2017.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Ni una menos at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website

menos, peruvian, niunamenos, march, august, 2016, niunamenos, peru, spanish, ˈuna, ˈmenos, spanish, woman, less, latin, american, fourth, wave, grassroots, feminist, movement, which, started, argentina, spread, across, several, latin, american, countries, that. For the Peruvian NiUnaMenos march of August 13 2016 see NiUnaMenos Peru Ni una menos Spanish ni ˈuna ˈmenos Spanish for Not one woman less is a Latin American fourth wave 1 2 grassroots 3 feminist movement which started in Argentina and has spread across several Latin American countries that campaigns against gender based violence This mass mobilization comes as a response to various systemic issues that proliferate violence against women In its official website Ni una menos defines itself as a collective scream against machista violence 4 The campaign was started by a collective of Argentine female artists journalists and academics and has grown into a continental alliance of feminist forces 5 Social media was an essential factor in the propagation of the Ni Una Menos movement to other countries and regions The movement regularly holds protests against femicides but has also touched on topics such as gender roles sexual harassment gender pay gap sexual objectification legality of abortion sex workers rights and transgender rights Ni una menosFormation2015TypeSocial movementLocationArgentinaWebsiteniunamenos org arThe collective takes its name from a 1995 phrase by Mexican poet and activist Susana Chavez Ni una muerta mas Spanish for Not one more woman dead in protest to the female homicides in Ciudad Juarez Chavez herself was assassinated in 2011 moment in which the phrase became a symbol of struggle 6 7 Contents 1 Context for movement origin 2 Across Latin America 2 1 Argentina 2 2 Peru 2 3 Mexico 2 4 Puerto Rico 3 The Impact of the Ni Una Menos Movement Within Other Movements 3 1 The Green Tide 3 2 Justicia para Nuestras Hijas 4 Diversity 5 The Queer Community 6 Beyond Latin America 6 1 United States 7 Criticism and Backlash 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksContext for movement origin editLatin America has incredibly high rates of femicide or feminicide at least 12 women suffer from gender based violence daily Additionally 14 out of the 25 countries with the highest rates of gender based violence can be found in Latin America 8 The primary age group that is a victim of this sort of violence are young women aged 15 29 9 Gender based violence can be described as diverse tactics to keep women in a subordinate position in society 10 The actual conditions and methods to exert violence can vary greatly For example they can range from murder in a civil war environment to being slapped in an otherwise peaceful home Furthermore defining victims of feminicide is slightly distinct from female victims of homicide For a case to be classified as femicide victims are killed because of their gender 11 Nevertheless this statistic may be higher and more nuanced because collecting accurate data is difficult This pattern creates more barriers to institutionalizing practices that may protect women from gender based violence 8 A factor that influences the prevalence of gender based violence in Latin America is gender inequality In Latin America women are often more socially and economically disadvantaged compared to women in North America and Western Europe 12 This may perpetuate dynamics where women are more likely to remain in relationships where they are experiencing abuse or violence Furthermore many feminists point to institutional violence as a factor that proliferates more gender based violence and femicide They cite impunity for men within legal institutions as a mechanism that impedes women from achieving justice 13 They argue that the legal system is built so that women face barriers or are improperly protected from violence Researchers have concluded that the level of impunity in a country is an accurate predictor of higher rates of femicide 13 On the other hand toxic masculinity or machismo is very prevalent in Latin America These concepts refer to the notion that men are stronger than women and must assert control in order to protect them However they often incorporate an aggressive and exaggerated assertion of masculinity that can translate into a propensity for gender based discrimination and gender based violence 11 Lastly gender based violence is more common in areas that are more prone to cartel and gang violence Violence against the female body is used as a tool to assert control and dominance 14 Furthermore as cartels expand they begin to delve into practices beyond drugs including sexual exploitation and trafficking 15 Moreover it reiterates ideas of machismo and consequent female submissiveness These patterns are prevalent in Latin America due to the amount of drug and cartel violence In Central America around 600 000 people are internally displaced due to gang violence 14 On the other hand levels of violence across the region have been increasing in the past couple of years 16 Across Latin America editArgentina edit nbsp Ni Una Menos protest in Argentina in 2018 The green handkerchiefs are typically used to signal support for abortion legalization 17 The Ni Una Menos movement was born in Argentina The protest was organized after the murder of 14 year old Chiara Paez found buried underneath her boyfriend s house on May 11 2015 because she wanted to keep the baby and he did not so he beat her to death when she was a few weeks pregnant 18 They were able to mobilize 200 000 people in Buenos Aires alone 19 The movement was iterated as opposition to femicide and violence against women but did not discuss more controversial topics originally 20 The name Ni Una Menos can be roughly translated to Not One Woman Less This refers to not wanting any more women to die as a result of gender based violence The movement became nationally recognized with the use of the hashtag NiUnaMenos on social media title under which massive demonstrations were held on June 3 2015 having the Palace of the Argentine National Congress as a main meeting point 20 Since the first NiUnaMenos in 2015 demonstrations take place every year in Argentina on June 3 Furthermore the movement has continued to expand to other countries and regions due to its strong digital presence 21 The transnational spread through the use of social media after the movement s birth in Argentina has allowed for different places to adapt to their local needs while maintaining a sense of solidarity On October 19 2016 the Ni una menos collective organized a first ever women mass strike in Argentina in response to the murder of 16 year old Lucia Perez who was raped and impaled in the coastal city of Mar del Plata 22 23 It consisted of a one hour pause from work and study early in the afternoon with protesters dressed in mourning for what was known as Miercoles negro Spanish for Black Wednesday These protests became region wide and gave the movement a greater international momentum with street demonstrations also taking place in Chile Peru Bolivia Paraguay Uruguay El Salvador Guatemala Mexico and Spain 24 25 As a direct result of Ni Una Menos protests the Registry of Femicides and the Centre for the Registration Systematisation and Monitoring of Feminicides were created to keep a better record of gender based violence The government also established the Ministry for Women Gender and Diversity 26 Moreover Ni Una Menos protests in Argentina are credited as a catalyst for the legalization of first trimester elective abortion on December 30 2020 27 The movement drifted from their original mission to combat violence against women and adopted abortion rights as a key issue in the movement The vastness of the protests caused abortion to become a salient topic in the Argentine legislature and caused more people to support its legalization 28 Peru edit nbsp Ni Una Menos protest in Peru In Peru over 30 of women report suffering physical violence at the hands of a spouse in their lifetime 29 Further in a 2006 World Health Organization survey they found that Peru had the highest rates of violence in the region with 61 reporting violence experiencing violence at the hands of an intimate partner 30 The NiUnaMenos Peru movement was sparked in July 2016 when Adriano Pozo Arias a known abuser was released from jail A video captures him attacking his girlfriend Cindy Arlette Contreras Bautista He was convicted and sent to jail but only served a one year sentence Another case that impulsed Peruvians into action was when Ronny Garcia beat Lady Guillen 31 The resulting protest on August 13 2016 has been recognized as the largest protest in Peruvian history with hundreds of thousands of people in attendance in Lima 32 People were mobilized and the march s logistics were planned over Facebook as tensions and frustrations about high levels of feminicide and the lack of a strong state response to this issue increased 31 There have been subsequent Ni Una Menos marches in Peru on 2017 33 and 2018 34 In Peru there has been considerable backlash against the adoption of abortion rights as an issue Ni Una Menos is championing for Cardinal Juan Luis Cipriani a prominent religious leader condemned the legalization of abortion in cases of child rape and the expansion of sex education courses in schools 35 He has even organized counterprotests to proliferate his opposing more conservative beliefs Mexico edit Historically Mexico has been a country with one the highest femicide rates in Latin America From the years 2015 2021 Mexico had a 135 increase of femicide going from 427 victims to a little above 1 000 victims 36 In Mexico the Ni Una Menos movement has been observed to be prevalent and active While there have been many street demonstrations following the Ni Una Menos movement in Mexico there was a bigger nationwide strike and Ni Una Menos protest on March 9 2020 This protest consisted of women only staying home meaning women didn t go to school work or any public place This nationwide strike was carried out due to the lack of government involvement and cooperation to address and handle femicide domestic violence and other issues Albeit due to the COVID 19 pandemic Ni Una Menos demonstrations or organizing were deterred and femicide cases during the pandemic continued to increase 36 However recently a few efforts have been seen by the Mexican government to address some of these concerns For example there is a prosecutor s office that is dedicated to gender crimes including femicides 36 Nevertheless femicide is still an ongoing issue and a tragic reality for many women in Mexico and other countries across Latin America 36 Puerto Rico edit In 2018 Puerto Rico reported high rates of femicide with an estimated femicide per week on average In 2020 Puerto Rico reported 60 femicide cases Moreover Puerto Rico declared a state of emergency against gender based violence and femicide in January 2021 37 Despite declaring a state of emergency against gender based violence femicide rates continued Within the same year the news of the killings of two femicide cases in Puerto Rico was widespread and as a result they received a lot of national attention and a big turnout for the Ni Una Menos demonstration on May 2 2021 38 These cases were the cases of Andrea Ruiz Costas and Keishla Rodriguez Ortiz Andrea Ruiz Costas was killed by her abusive ex boyfriend in April 2021 after the court rejected the protection order she filed against him Days later on May 1st the body of Keishla Rodriguez Ortiz was found in the San Jose Lagoon located next to the San Juan s Teodoro Moscoso Bridge where the demonstration took place Keishla was pregnant when her famous boxer boyfriend Felix Verdejo killed her 38 As a result activists and other Puerto Rican civilians took to the San Juan Teodoro Moscoso Bridge to protest against femicide and to call for justice for these victims Hundreds of people showed up to the demonstration and shut down the bridge stopping traffic and usage of the bridge Protestors had signs with Ni Una Menos written on them and cars that blocked the lanes with the same phrase written on them These protestors advocated for and preached the slogan aligning themselves with the movement as they were calling for an end to gender based violence and femicide 38 The Impact of the Ni Una Menos Movement Within Other Movements editThe Green Tide edit While the Ni Una Menos movement is broader and extensive this movement has inspired and has been incorporated or infused within other movements This is seen in the Green Tide movement The Green Tide movement refers to the movement in Latin America that fights for reproductive justice such as the legalization of abortion which is heavily promoted through the usage of green bandanas or green scarves The green bandanas were originally a symbol that represented the right to legalized abortions used by the National Campaign for Legal Safe and Free Abortion This campaign is a campaign from Argentina that presented a bill in 2003 calling for the legalization of abortion however they had no luck in passing it 39 While the symbol and representation behind the green scarf were first started by the National Campaign for Legal Safe and Free Abortion the Ni Una Menos movement is what popularized it and spread the symbol across Latin America Many Ni Una Menos protests and demonstrations in Latin America are accompanied by green bandanas scarves Along with these green panuelos or bandanas were many chants such as the chant Las ricas abortan las pobres mueren meaning the rich women abort while the poor women die highlighting the injustices and disproportionate inequalities that affect poor women due to the inaccessibility to a legal abortion 39 Although the Ni Una Menos movement s prime objective is to fight against femicide and domestic abuse general women s rights such as the right to an abortion were heavily integrated into the movement With many Ni Una Menos protests accompanied by the green scarves and the green movement on December 30 2020 abortion of up to 14 weeks of pregnancy was legalized in Argentina the heart and origin of the movement 39 The presence of the Green Tide due to the Ni Una Menos movement was seen in many Latin American countries such as Mexico and as a result curated law changes in favor of the movement s ideals In September 2021 the Mexican Supreme Court declared that abortions would no longer be criminalized Furthermore every year on September 28 International Safe Abortion Day and March 8 International Women s Day cities across Latin America become visually green as they are filled with green panuelos and green bandana demonstrations showing the impact of the green tide that was preached by the Ni Una Menos movement 39 Justicia para Nuestras Hijas edit Another movement that incorporates Ni Una Menos values is the organization Justicia para Nuestras Hijas or Justice for Our Daughters Justicia para Nuestras Hijas is an activist group that advocates for the rights and justice of femicide victims in Chihuahua Mexico This group is made up of family members and activists who seek justice for their daughters and want an end to femicide in Mexico Due to the lack of proper investigation and government negligence this organization conducts its own investigations to acquire justice for femicide victims or missing women 40 When there are public demonstrations or protests on the streets by this group they carry a pink cross as their symbol On this pink cross is the phrase Ni Una Menos This group carries on the message and incorporates the values of the Ni Unas Menos movement as the movement fights against femicide 40 Diversity editThe Ni Una Menos has been a welcoming movement that has created a safe space for people of many different intersectionalities The movement s diversity encourages younger generations to join the movement regardless of their backgrounds and identities The movement s diversity also plays into part in why it has been successful and why it has been so widespread across Latin America The inclusion and welcoming of Black indigenous trans and queer women has allowed the movement to gain a lot of support and followers The movement is not limited to one identity or one certain woman but instead accounts for many women and the many intersectionalities that encompass Latin America 41 42 While other movements such as the MeToo movement are critiqued by feminist scholars such as Angela Davis for the lack of inclusion and taking into account structural issues such as race the Ni Una Menos movement acknowledges structural issues such as race and gender in society 42 By using intersectional feminism the Ni Una Menos movement is able to address issues affecting women with a broader perspective and can connect issues such as femicide to other gender and racial issues prevalent in society 42 The Queer Community editWhile it is not exactly clear where the Ni Una Menos collective stands with queer rights queer issues and other related issues the Ni Una Menos is known to be an intersectional and welcoming movement where the LGBTQ community is embraced and active in Ni Una Menos demonstrations aligning themselves with an LGBTQ rights agenda 35 43 For example in 2018 the Ni Una Menos movement organized a global stance against patriarchy that was called the Orgasmarathon This event was an international and global orgasm that intended to include and preach for the necessities and aspirations of feminists and the LGBTQ community 43 This event was spread on social media to reach international participation where women from wherever they were located were encouraged to engage in self pleasure and be a part of what was explained to be a sexual revolution by the Ni Una Menos collective whilst embracing different sexualities and identities within the broader Ni Una Menos movement This event occurred on the same day as the 2018 International Women s Strike on March 8 at midnight 43 Beyond Latin America editUnited States edit nbsp MeToo sign at the 2018 Women s March in New YorkThe Ni Una Menos movement expressed itself as the large scale MeToo Movement in the United States Their missions are somewhat different since MeToo focuses on calling out perpetrators of sexual assault and harassment in positions of power while Ni Una Menos pays more attention to femicide specifically They share themes of improving the situation of violence against women and secured much of their support from social media Moreover MeToo has collaborated with Ni Una Menos as they did for the International Women s Strike in 2017 44 45 They have also pointed to Ni Una Menos as an inspiration to their activism The MeToo Movement began in 2017 a couple of years after the first protest in Argentina and the movement had begun to spread throughout the rest of South America and the Caribbean It was a reaction to Harvey Weinstein s continued inappropriate sexual behavior 46 Several actresses including Alyssa Milano took to social media to denounce Weinstein They also encouraged other women to share experiences within the same industry with other perpetrators This initiative expanded to other industries and people in power within them The purpose of the movement was for women to find solidarity support and a safe space to share their stories of sexual assault and harassment 47 The phrase Me Too was originally coined by Tarana Burke in 2007 to encourage survivors to speak out However it became more mainstream once it reached social media in 2017 48 Criticism and Backlash editThe basis of the Ni Una Menos movement is that women face disproportionate violence due to their gender Some critics counter this assertion with the fact that in aggregate men face more violence than women 49 Some respond to this by reframing feminicide as an effect of a patriarchal society that has negative consequences for everybody that lives within it Meanwhile others simply reject the movement nbsp Milagro Sala a controversial figure in Argentine social and political spheres that brings critiques to the Ni Una Menos movement On the other hand Ni Una Menos strategically establishes itself as a movement against gender based violence While many members of the movement champion for other aspects of women s liberation such as abortion rights and LGBTQ rights the movement has not adopted an official position for either of these 35 However there still are strong indicators that the rise of the Ni Una Menos movement facilitated the abortion legalization process in Argentina 28 Conservative and religious sectors across Latin America have opposed the overlap between people that support the Ni Una Menos movement and these other rights The movement has been criticized by some journalists especially since 2017 for some of its demands such as the freedom of Milagro Sala in Argentina 50 Sala is an indigenous Qulla politician and social leader who was convicted for 13 years in prison for fraud extortion and illicit association Some Ni Una Menos activists believe that she was wrongly arrested for political purposes She and her arrest are controversial topics in Argentine public discourse See also edit nbsp Feminism portal nbsp Society portal nbsp Latin America portal2017 Women s March Ele Nao movement Brazil 2018 Feminism in Latin America Feminism in Argentina Feminism in Chile Feminism in Mexico Women in Argentina Women in Chile Women in Paraguay Women in Peru Women in Uruguay Gender inequality in Bolivia LGBT rights in Argentina List of protests in the 21st centuryReferences edit Young Linda 11 December 2017 A Women s Strike Organizer on Feminism for the 99 Percent Broadly Vice Media Retrieved 5 May 2018 Branigan Claire Palmeiro Cecilia 8 March 2018 Women Strike in Latin America and Beyond North American Congress on Latin America Retrieved 4 October 2021 Palmer Rose 15 December 2017 Ni Una Menos An Uprising of Women in Argentina Culture Trip Retrieved 5 May 2018 Que es Ni una menos in Spanish Ni una menos Retrieved 21 April 2017 Gago Veronica Santomaso Agustina 7 March 2017 Argentina s Life or Death Women s Movement Jacobin Bhaskar Sunkara Retrieved 25 April 2017 NiUnaMenos Quien fue la autora de la consigna que une a miles contra la violencia de genero in Spanish Minutouno com 3 June 2015 Retrieved 26 March 2018 Subirana Abanto Katherine 4 March 2018 El tiempo de la accion El Comercio in Spanish Retrieved 26 March 2018 a b Exploring the Data The Prevalence of Gender based Violence in Latin America Wilson Center gbv wilsoncenter org Archived from the original on 19 April 2023 Retrieved 27 February 2023 Caribbean Economic Commission for Latin America and the 24 November 2022 ECLAC At Least 4 473 Women Were Victims of Femicide in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2021 www cepal org in Spanish Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 27 February 2023 Wilson Tamar Diana 2014 Introduction Violence against Women in Latin America Latin American Perspectives 41 1 3 18 doi 10 1177 0094582X13492143 ISSN 0094 582X JSTOR 24573973 Archived from the original on 16 February 2023 Retrieved 1 May 2023 a b Machismo Femicides and Child s Play Gender Violence in Mexico Harvard International Review 19 May 2020 Archived from the original on 29 January 2023 Retrieved 27 March 2023 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 27 February 2023 Retrieved 24 April 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Saccomano Celeste 2017 El feminicidio en America Latina vacio legal o deficit del Estado de derecho Feminicide in Latin America legal vacuum or deficit in the rule of law Revista CIDOB d Afers Internacionals 117 51 78 doi 10 24241 rcai 2017 117 3 51 ISSN 1133 6595 JSTOR 26388133 a b Violence Against Women by Cartels and Gangs in El Salvador Honduras Weaponisation of Female Bodi The Security Distillery 12 February 2021 Archived from the original on 27 March 2023 Retrieved 27 March 2023 Mohor W Daniela 4 June 2022 As drug cartels expand their reach across Latin America Chile takes a hit CNN Archived from the original on 27 March 2023 Retrieved 27 March 2023 Rising violence in the last year can intensify humanitarian crises in Latin America IRC International Rescue Committee IRC www rescue org Archived from the original on 27 March 2023 Retrieved 27 March 2023 Why we continue to march towards legal abortion in Argentina Amnesty International 8 August 2019 Retrieved 1 May 2023 Pomeraniec Hinde 8 June 2015 How Argentina rose up against the murder of women The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 30 April 2023 Justice Adam 4 June 2015 Argentina 200 000 rally against femicide and domestic violence in Buenos Aires International Business Times UK Retrieved 30 April 2023 a b Rabinovich Andres NiUnaMenos in Spanish a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Piatti Crocker Adriana 23 November 2021 Diffusion of NiUnaMenos in Latin America Social Protests Amid a Pandemic Journal of International Women s Studies 22 12 7 24 ISSN 1539 8706 NiUnaMenos Not One Woman Less Not One More Death NACLA Retrieved 30 April 2023 El aberrante empalamiento de una nina de 16 anos indigna a Argentina BBC News Mundo in Spanish Retrieved 30 April 2023 Gordon Sarah 21 October 2016 NiUnaMenos How the brutal gang rape and murder of a schoolgirl united the furious women of Latin America The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 30 April 2023 Goni Uki 20 October 2016 Argentina s women joined across South America in marches against violence The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 30 April 2023 BOLETIN OFICIAL REPUBLICA ARGENTINA LEY DE MINISTERIOS Decreto 7 2019 www boletinoficial gob ar Retrieved 30 April 2023 Politi Daniel Londono Ernesto 30 December 2020 Argentina Legalizes Abortion a Milestone in a Conservative Region The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 30 April 2023 a b Daby Mariela Moseley Mason W June 2022 Feminist Mobilization and the Abortion Debate in Latin America Lessons from Argentina Politics amp Gender 18 2 359 393 doi 10 1017 S1743923X20000197 ISSN 1743 923X S2CID 233957209 Violencia de Genero Cuadro 8 1 Perǘ Violencia fisica contra la mujer ejercida alguna vez por parte del esposo o companero segǘn ambito geografico Instituto Nacional de Estadistica in Spanish 2015 Retrieved August 13 2016 Wilson Tamar Diana 2014 Introduction Violence against Women in Latin America Latin American Perspectives 41 1 3 18 doi 10 1177 0094582X13492143 ISSN 0094 582X JSTOR 24573973 a b Choque Franklin Americo Canaza 4 January 2021 Por nuestras muertas El despertar de un poder y la movilizacion de Ni Una Menos NUM en el Peru de 2016 Puriq in Spanish 3 1 11 25 doi 10 37073 puriq 3 1 107 ISSN 2707 3602 S2CID 234215823 La larga marcha Diario UNO in Spanish August 14 2016 PERU COM NOTICIAS 26 November 2017 NiUnaMenos asi fue la marcha en Lima contra violencia a mujeres ACTUALIDAD Peru com in Spanish Retrieved 1 May 2023 Collyns Dan 5 June 2018 Fury over Peru president s reaction to woman s murder by stalker The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 1 May 2023 a b c Ni Una Menos Stares Down Conservative Reaction Ni Una Menos enfrenta una reaccion conservadora NACLA Retrieved 27 February 2023 a b c d The Continuing Fight Against Femicide in Latin America International Relations Review 25 May 2023 Retrieved 29 November 2023 Gowing Clarissa 23 January 2023 Puerto Rico s gender violence problem in context Pasquines Retrieved 6 December 2023 a b c Jackson Jhoni 3 May 2021 Hundreds Take to the Streets of Puerto Rico to Protest Two Femicides Remezcla Retrieved 6 December 2023 a b c d Chediac Joyce Latin America s Green Tide Working women s abortion access solidarity knows no borders Liberation News Liberation News Retrieved 29 November 2023 a b Bejarano Cynthia Fregoso Rosa Linda 2010 Terrorizing Women Feminicide in the Americas Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 9264 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Friedman Elisabeth Jay Rodriguez Gusta Ana Laura 20 February 2023 Welcome to the Revolution Promoting Generational Renewal in Argentina s Ni Una Menos Qualitative Sociology 46 2 245 277 doi 10 1007 s11133 023 09530 0 ISSN 0162 0436 PMC 9940077 PMID 36846824 a b c Shagufta Cheema Iqra 2023 The Other MeToos academic oup com New York Oxford University Press p 86 C5P63 doi 10 1093 oso 9780197619872 001 0001 Retrieved 6 December 2023 a b c Sosa Cecilia 24 March 2021 Mourning Activism and Queer Desires Ni Una Menos and Carri s Las hijas del fuego Latin American Perspectives 48 2 137 154 doi 10 1177 0094582X20988699 ISSN 0094 582X Beatley Megan 9 March 2017 Meet the Argentine Women Behind Ni Una Menos the Feminist Collective Angela Davis Cites as Inspiration Remezcla Remezcla LLC Retrieved 25 April 2017 Alcoff Linda Martin Arruzza Cinzia Bhattacharya Tithi Fraser Nancy Ransby Barbara Taylor Keeanga Yamahtta Odeh Rasmea Davis Angela 6 February 2017 Women of America we re going on strike Join us so Trump will see our power theguardian com Retrieved 25 April 2017 SARBANES JANET 2022 On New Forms of Autonomous Politics in Our Era and a New Mode of Instituting Letters on the Autonomy Project Punctum Books pp 119 126 JSTOR j ctv2mm2113 16 retrieved 2 May 2023 Get To Know Us Our Vision amp Theory of Change me too Movement Retrieved 2 May 2023 Tambe Ashwini 2018 Reckoning with the Silences of MeToo Feminist Studies 44 1 197 203 doi 10 15767 feministstudies 44 1 0197 ISSN 0046 3663 JSTOR 10 15767 feministstudies 44 1 0197 S2CID 150244127 ARCE JOSE MANUEL VALENZUELA 2020 Ni Una Mas NI UNA MAS La lucha contra el feminicidio traiciona al feminismo procesos investigativos y violencias simbolicas CLACSO pp 77 96 doi 10 2307 j ctv1gm02x8 7 JSTOR j ctv1gm02x8 7 S2CID 191853865 Retrieved 30 April 2023 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help La politizacion de Ni Una Menos aspero debate en Intratables Mira el video El Intransigente in Spanish Infobae 5 June 2017 Archived from the original on 12 October 2017 Retrieved 25 June 2017 External links edit nbsp Media related to Ni una menos at Wikimedia Commons Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ni una menos amp oldid 1189871266, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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