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March 2021 | International Women's Day and Women History Month at UCL Americas

 

Women History Month 2021 | a UCL Americas digest
March 8 2021 | International Women's Day
Events in March 2021
Research
Selected past events

Every day is 'Women's Day' at UCL Americas, but on this day we salute and celebrate the thousands, the millions of women who make history everyday, throughout the world and especially in the Americas, whatever their role is: the political leader, the social activist, the anonymous citizen, the artist, the scientist. Learn more about what we teach and research at UCL Institute of the Americas via the links in our profile to the various relevant pages of our website: academic staff profiles, teaching modules, news and events.

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[Image: link to Youtube slideshow video, showing a photo of Rigoberta Menchú, indigenous Guatemalan human rights activist, feminist, and Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1992), along with the caption International Women's History Day March 8 2021, against a blurred image showing a detail of the painting 'Marie Jeanne Lamartinière' © Haiti-born Patricia Brintle]


Images, in order of appearance in the slideshow:


1. Dilma Rousseff, former president of Brazil from 2011 to 2016; first woman to hold the presidency of Brazil [credit: Official photo, Palacio Alvorada]
2. Domitila Barrios (1937-2012), Bolivian labour leader and social activist, her renowned self-biography 'Si me permiten hablar' (May I be allowed to speak?') portrays her journey from oppressed miner's wife to influential union activist [credit: ©Revista Maíz]
3. Bertha Cáceres (1971-2016), Honduran environmentalist and activist for the rights of indigenous people [credit: ©Wikicommons]
4. María Eva Duarte de Perón, aka Eva Perón or 'Evita' (1919-1952), Argentinean politician and social activist [credit: ©blogspot]
5. Ga'axstal'a, aka Jane Cook (1870 – 1951), was a Canadian First Nations leader and activist of the Kwakwakaʼwakw people [credit: ©Royal British Columbia Museum, BC Archives]
6. Malintzin, aka Doña Marina or La Malinche, (ca 1500-1529), was an indigenous Nahua woman from what is now Mexico, interpreter for Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes; considered key to his advance into the heart of the Aztec empire [credit: ©Lienzo de Tlaxcala, 16th century]
7. Mari-Jane Seacole (1805-1881), British-Caribbean nurse, considered a pioneer in battle-front health provision for the military [credit: ©Albert Charles Challen]
8. Michelle Bachelet, former president of Chile, 2006-2010 and 2014-2018, currently UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. [credit: ©M Bachelet Twitter account]
9. Rigoberta Menchú, indigenous Guatemalan human rights activist, feminist, and Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1992) [credit: ©Grupo BCC]
10. Rosa Parks (1913-2005), American Civil Rights movement activist. US Congress called her 'the mother of freedom movement'. [credit: ©NBC News]
11. Aleida Guevara, Cuban paediatrician, human rights, international health cooperation and debt relief activist [credit: ©Cubanet]
12. Dame Eugenia Charles (1919-2005), first female lawyer in Dominica, and later on first female Prime Minister of Dominica [credit: ©CaribbeanNationalWeekly]
13. Augusta Chávarri del Castillo aka Yma Sumac (1922-2008), Peruvian singer and film star, famous for her exceptional voice range; met with great success, mostly in Hollywood and Europe [credit: ©Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images)
14. Grace Jones, Jamaican fashion model, singer, composer and entertainer; one of the first black women to triumph in the world of fashion modelling and design [credit: artwork album 'Nightclubbing' ©gracejones.com]

Credit: background image: 'Marie Jeanne Lamartinière' © Haiti-born Patricia Brintle, by kind permission


Events in March 2021

During Women History Month 2021 we will be organising three events to mark the month, two as part of own suite of events, and one in collaboration with the Institute of Historical Research, University of London.

March 3

Book launch: Los Feminismos en América Latina

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[Image: link to Youtube video of the event, showing a screenshoot of (from top left, clockwise) Dr Patricio Simonetto, Professor Dora Barranco, Professor Gabriela Cano, Phoebe Martin]


March 10

Fanm Rebèl: Excavating the Histories of Haiti's Women Revolutionaries

YouTube Widget Placeholderhttps://youtu.be/AR2HVZtj_Vw

[Image: link to Youtube video of the event, showing a screenshoot of guest speaker Dr Nicole Willson]


March 16

El dinero no es todo: Compra y venta de sexo en la Argentina del siglo XX

An event organised by the Institute of Historical Research Latin American History Series

Dr Patricio Simonetto
Composite image comprising of the cover of Patricio Simonetto's El Dinero no es Todo, the logo of the book launch organiser Institute of Historical Research and the date and time of the event

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Research

We are fortunate at UCL Americas to count on top-notch scholars in Gender Studies amongst our academic staff, and to be able to offer this area of knowledge to our students as one of our strong areas of study and research. In this section you will find a small selection of our academic staff's numerous pieces of research and publications.

Mercedes Crisóstomo | PhD candidate

Cover of Mercedes Crisostomo's book 'Genero y conflicto armado interno en el Peru'
Mercedes is working on her research project Militant Women in the Peruvian Revolutionary Projects before the Internal Armed Conflict, under the supervision of Professor Paulo Drinot and Dr Kate Saunders-Hastings. Her doctoral project examines the 1960s and 1970s through the experiences and memories of left-wing militant women, both from urban and rural settings, who took part in revolutionary political parties aspiring to challenge and change the Peruvian status quo.

Mercedes has already published extensively, as author, co-author, editor and collaborator, on themes such as agrarian reform, armed conflict, and gender rights, including the book Género y conflicto armado interno en el Perú. Testimonio y memoria. (ed.) Lima: Fondo Editorial Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú (2018) and the article 'Women’s Rights in Peru: insights from two organizations.' Global Networks Journal, Vol 9 (4), 485-506, co-authored with Alayza, R. (2009)


Professor Paulo Drinot | Professor of Latin American History

Cover of Paulo Drinot's book 'The Sexual Question. A History of Prostitution in Peru, 1850s-1950s'
Paulo Drinot's main research focus is the history of Peru in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His thematic interests include labour history and state formation, racism and exclusion, gender and sexuality, the social history of medicine, and memory and historiography.

In 2020, Professor Drinot published The Sexual Question. A History of Prostitution in Peru, 1850s-1950s, a landmark study that charts a cyclic process of regulation and abolition in Peru, uncovering the ideas, policies, and actors shaping the debates on prostitution in Lima and beyond. The history of prostitution, Paulo Drinot shows, sheds light on the interplay of gender and sexuality, medicine and public health, and nation-building and state formation in Peru.


Dr Malu Gatto | Assistant Professor of Latin American Politics

Can conservatism make women more vulnerable to violence?

Dr Malu Gatto
A joint study with Dr Victor Araujo, exploring the links between conservatism and violence against women in Brazil, pulbished in 2021 by the open-access preprint platform Advance | Social Sciences and Humanities, and soon to be published in a peer-reviewed journal.

Find out more about Dr Gatto's research and teaching.


Mallory Horrill | PhD candidate

Mallory Horrill
Mallory's doctoral project, Victorian Image of Canada: English Gentlewomen and their Perceptions of Canada 1830-1900, explores the English Victorian female perception of Canada and the female influence on creating and/or altering the Canadian image. The formation of the Canadian identity in the Victorian era has largely been discussed from th male lens, this work aims to address this significant missing chapter. Through the examination of primary materials produced by a number of female settlers and travellers which speak to the women's experiences in Canada, Mallory analyses women's experience and reflections of Canadian society, politics and nature, their understanding of and interactions with the French Canadians and Indigenous Peoples of Canada.

Phoebe Martin | PhD candidate

Phoebe Martin
How have women in Peru used cultural contestations to challenge dominant discourses? Cultural forms of protest, or 'cultural contestations', have long been crucial in allowing marginalised groups, particularly women, to provide alternative and oppositional narratives. Phoebe's doctoral project Culture as protest: the uses of art and performance to tackle cultural gender norms in Peru looks at how cultural contestations have been used by women in Peru; comparing how cultural actors, activists, mainstream media, and the state construct narratives in relation to sexuality, the body, motherhood, and sexual violence.

Phoebe has participated in multiple events both within UCL at other prestigious institutions. Her participations include the paper ‘Poner la cuerpa’: The Body as a Site of Reproductive Rights Activism in Peru – at the conference Cultural Politics of Reproduction in Latin America conferencein January 2021, and, in 2020, the co-organisation of the gender-themed workshop Andinxs: Addressing Contemporary Politics and Gender in the Andes’, which brought together scholars from Latin America and Europe to discuss the increasingly contested relationship between politics and gender in the Andean region.

Phoebe is a member of the editorial collective Feminist Perspectives blog, and is the author of the blog: ‘The 'Pañuelo Verde' Across Latin America: a Symbol of Transnational and Local Feminist (Re)volution’ Feminist Perspectives, KCL


Professor Maxine Molyneux | Professor of Sociology

Maxine Molyneux’s current research is on the transformations of welfare systems in Latin America, citizen participation and accountability in social protection in Latin America; and the history and politics of Latin American feminism. Find out more about the vast research undertaken by and the large number of books, articles and chapter she has published over the years on the theme of women's rights and gender justice.

Gender, Justice and Development
Movimientos de mujeres en America Latina

Carolina Páez Vacas | PhD candidate

Carolina Paez Vacas
In the 1990's, for the first time, the Ecuadorian state addressed adolescent pregnancy as a public health problem. Despite two decades of public efforts to deal with this issue teenage pregnancies had climbed at alarming rates. Carolina's doctoral project, titled The Children of Chuzalongo: the Politics of Motherhood in Ecuador deals with thedaily actions that adolescent mothers display in order to provide care within a state project.
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Previous events

Over the years, UCL Institute of the Americas has undertaken a policy of public engagement, organising various series of open, free events: seminars, book launches, roundtable discussions, film screenings and workshops. Women's rights is one of the main themes of our events series.

November 23 2020

Latin American Countries and Women's Rights and Needs during the Pandemic

Dr Constanza Tabbush (UN Women), Dr Silke Staab (UN Women), Dr Eleonor Faur (National University of San Martin and Institute of Economic and Social Development, Argentina), Dr Bila Sorj (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), Dr Paola Jirón (University of Chile), Dr Jasmine Gideon (Birkbeck College, University of London), Professor Maxine Molyneux (UCL Institute of the Americas)

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[Image: link to Youtube video of the event, showing a screenshoot of (from top left, clockwise) Dr Constanza Tabbush, Professor Maxine Molyneux, Professor Nicola Miller, Dr Silke Staab] 


July 16 2020

Sexing the Blue Tide: The Backlash Against Sexual and Gender Justice in Latin America

Dr Constanza Tabbush (UN Women); Professor Maxine Molyneux, Professor Jonathan Bell (both UCL Institute of the Americas)

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[Image: link to Youtube video of the event, showing a screenshoot of Dr Constanza Tabbush] 

Book launch: 'Just Watch Us: RCMP Surveillance of the Women's Liberation Movement in Cold War Canada'

Dr Christabelle Sethna (University of Ottawa); Dr Steve Hewitt (University of Birmingham)

SoundCloud Widget Placeholderhttps://soundcloud.com/ucl-arts-social-science/book-launch-just-watch-us...

[Image: link to the Soundcloud podcast, showing a detail of a blurred, redacted surveillance document, which reveals the words that form the title of the book]


November 2 2017 

Eva Perón and the Women's Vote: Credit Where It's Due?

Dr Jill Hedges (Oxford Analytica)

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[Image: link to the Soundcloud podcast, showing a detail of the cover of the book 'The Life of Eva Peron' by Dr Jill Hedges] 


March 13 2017

Politics, Gender and Health: Insight from Argentina's Provinces

Professor James McGuire (Wesleyan University)

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[Image: link to the Soundcloud podcast, showing a detail of a schematic globe map of Central and South America]  


May 12 2016

'Stop Asking the Women to Workshop You': Cultures of Inequality in Higher Education

Dr Say Burgin and Dr Kate Dossett (both Leeds)

SoundCloud Widget Placeholderhttps://soundcloud.com/ucl-arts-social-science/ucl-americas-seminar-stop...

[Image: link to the Soundcloud podcast, showing a detail of a whimsical image of a woman cycling past a traffic signpost that reads 'Welcome to Fantasyland - twinned with Cloud Nine']


December 9 2015

Decolonizing Development: Kichwa and Tsachila women's engagement with postcolonial development

Professor Sarah Radcliffe (Cambridge)

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[Image: link to the Soundcloud podcast, showing a detail of a an early modern era map showing the southern half of North America, the whole of Central America and the Caribbean islands and the northern half of South America]  


November 4 2015

Gender and Protest at Morant Bay and in Post-Emancipation Caribbean

Professor Gad Heuman (Warwick)

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[Image: link to the Soundcloud podcast, showing a detail of the cover of the book ''The Killing Time' The Moran Bay Rebellion in Jamaica' by Professor Gad Heuman]


April 15 2015

Freedom of expression, power and the media in Mexico: the case of Carmen Aristegui

Dr Ella McPherson (Cambridge) and José Antonio Brambila (independent scholar)

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[Image: link to the Soundcloud podcast, showing a photograph of Mexican journalist Carmen Aristegui, wearing headphones]   


March 9 2015

Violence Against Women in Mexico and Central America

Laura Carlsen (CIP Americas Program), Marilyn Thomson (CAWN - Central America Women's Network) and Lorena Fuentes (Birkbeck College, University of London)

SoundCloud Widget Placeholderhttps://soundcloud.com/ucl-arts-social-science/violence-against-women-in...

[Image: link to the Soundcloud podcast, showing a detail of a an early modern era map showing part of Central America]   


March 6 2014

Gender Equality and Women's Rights in Latin America

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[Image: link to the Soundcloud podcast, showing an image of a puzzle with a female gender symbol acting as a key inserted into one of the puzzle pieces]

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