The Sociocultural Dimensions of Gender-Based Violence in Afro-Mexican Communities in the Coastal Region of Oaxaca, Mexico
Abstract
:1. Introduction
In Mexico, raza or la raza (race or the race) has a variety of meanings that are more expansive than the English term, including common folks, the people or breed. When Mexicans use raza in a manner similar to English speakers’ use of race, it connotes notions of ancestry, hierarchy and groupness.(Sue 2013, p. 203, italic in the book)
2. Materials and Methods
Personal Data Elaboration
3. Results
3.1. Social Control and Sexual Division of Spaces
3.2. Work and Psychoactive Substances Use
3.3. Judicial Violence and Lack of Support
3.4. “Going to the North”: When Emigration Reproduces Violence
3.4.1. Debts
“We sold everything: the fishing nets, the boat, he even went to Guerrero to borrow money from his mother’s family. He knew the coyote4 since they were kids, and still... one day he calls me and tells me that the car to take them across the border never arrived and that they have been waiting for two weeks. He didn’t even have the sheets to sleep on the floor. He is still there. Working in Caborca to save money and try again [to cross the border]. And we are here. Ay mamasıta... But we endure, that’s how we women do it: enduring.”(Personal communication, 4 January 2019)
3.4.2. The Call and Gossip
“He told me to go to [take] the call to Pinotepa and as I didn’t arrive on time for the call because there in Rio Verde the judicial [police] opened fire to halt a criminal, they couldn’t get the cars through. Aaah, you should have seen how he picked on me, he told me everything. “For so long you have been busy fucking!”, “That’s the way you like it, huh?”, I just said “if to tell me this you are calling me now, save your money”, I told him “because you need it more than I do”, I told him. I had gone all the way there to receive nothing, and I didn’t know how to deal with all that was happening, and even when he arrived [back from the US], he climbed up on a pole to see how I was doing while selling fish. I had a life you can’t imagine. Instead of coming home to eat a tortilla [after selling fish], I would come home to cry.”(Personal communication, 12 December 2018)
3.5. Body Control
3.6. Agency and Support
4. Discussion
4.1. Social Control and Sexual Division of Spaces
4.2. Work and Psychoactive Substances
4.3. Judicial Violence
4.4. Emigration
4.5. Body Control
4.5.1. Policy Implications and Recommendations
4.5.2. Limitations
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The name of the village is not mentioned so as to preserve the interviewees’ privacy and safety. |
2 | The Mexican tortilla is a type of thin and round bread made with maize or wheat flour, depending on the region. |
3 | All the names are fictious so as to preserve the interviewees’ privacy and safety. |
4 | A person who organizes the travel to the USA and guides the migrants on the other side of the Mexican border. |
5 | Typical coastal dish of sweetcorn flour and another ingredient (herbs, meat, fish, or seafood) wrapped in platano leaves and cooked. |
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Names of Interviewees | Age | Civil Status | Years of Marriage | Children | Schooling | Working Status | Years Living in the Village |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Marisol3 | 42 | Married | 15 | 3 | Primary education | Housewife and seller | 42 |
2. Juana | 58 | Married | 44 | 5 | Incomplete primary education | Housewife | 23 |
3. Antonia | 61 | Married | 45 | 4 | Incomplete primary education | Housewife | 10 |
4. Karina | 23 | Married | 8 | 2 | Primary education | Housewife | 4 |
5. Carmen | 30 | Married | 10 | 3 | High school and first year of university | Fisherwoman | 23 |
6. Guadalupe | 47 | Widow | 21 | 4 | Primary education | Fish seller | 21 |
7. Rosa | 68 | Widow | 34 | 3 | Incomplete primary education | Housewife and fish roaster | 24 |
8. Ana | 52 | Separated | 15 | 2 | Secondary education | Tortilla seller | 9 |
9. Paula | 34 | Married | 14 | 3 | Secondary education | Housewife | 34 |
10. Juliana | 49 | Married | 32 | 3 | Primary education | Housewife and seller | 15 |
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Share and Cite
Sartini, I. The Sociocultural Dimensions of Gender-Based Violence in Afro-Mexican Communities in the Coastal Region of Oaxaca, Mexico. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050188
Sartini I. The Sociocultural Dimensions of Gender-Based Violence in Afro-Mexican Communities in the Coastal Region of Oaxaca, Mexico. Social Sciences. 2022; 11(5):188. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050188
Chicago/Turabian StyleSartini, Ilaria. 2022. "The Sociocultural Dimensions of Gender-Based Violence in Afro-Mexican Communities in the Coastal Region of Oaxaca, Mexico" Social Sciences 11, no. 5: 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050188
APA StyleSartini, I. (2022). The Sociocultural Dimensions of Gender-Based Violence in Afro-Mexican Communities in the Coastal Region of Oaxaca, Mexico. Social Sciences, 11(5), 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050188