Human Rights Movements in Latin America - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Human Rights Movements in Latin America

Description:

Carlos Mej a Godoy, Las Campesinas del Cu . Voy a hablarles compa eros de las ... Retonaban los quiquiques, estaban la milpa en flor, cuando a la pobre Mart nez ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:123
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: angelin1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Human Rights Movements in Latin America


1
Human Rights Movements in Latin America
  • Prof. Angelina Godoy
  • LSJ/SIS 322
  • Fall 2009

2
Carlos Mejía Godoy, Las Campesinas del Cuá
  • Voy a hablarles compañeros de las mujeres del Cuá
    que bajaron de los cerros por orden del general
  • De la Maria Venancia y de la Amanda Aguilar, dos
    hijas de la montaña que no quisieron hablar
  • Ay, ay, a nadie vimos pasar. La noche negra se
    traga aquel llanto torrencial
  • Ay, ay, la patria llorando está, parecen gritos
    de parto los que se oyen por allá.
  • Comrades, Im going to tell you about the women
    of Cuá who came down the hills by order of the
    General
  • About María Venancia and Amanda Aguilar, two
    daughters of the mountain who didnt want to
    talk.
  • Ay, ay, we didnt see anyone pass by, the black
    night swallows that torrential sorrow
  • Ay, ay, the nation is crying, they seem like
    shrieks of labor pain, those cries you hear over
    there.

3
  • Dicen que al Chico Gonzalez no lo volvieron a
    ver de noche se lo llevaron para nunca más
    volver.
  • A Esteban y a Juan Hernández los subieron al
    avión y al aterrizar más tarde ya nadie más los
    miró
  • Ay, ay a nadie vimos pasar. La noche negra se
    traga aquel llanto torrencial
  • Ay, ay, la patria llorando está, parecen gritos
    de parto los que se oyen por allá.
  • They say that they didnt see Chico Gonzalez ever
    again they took him away one night, never to
    return again.
  • They forced Esteban and Juan Hernandez to board a
    plane, but when it landed later, they were never
    seen again.
  • Ay, ay, we didnt see anyone pass by. The black
    night swallows that torrential sorrow
  • Ay, ay, the nation is crying, they seem like
    shrieks of labor pain, those cries you over
    there.

4
  • A la Candida Martínez un guardia la conmino Vení
    chavala. le dijo. Laváme este pantalón.
  • La cipota campesina fue mancillada ahí no más, y
    Tacho desde una fiche reía en el taquesal
  • Ay, ay a nadie vimos pasar. La noche negra se
    traga aquel llanto torrencial
  • Ay, ay, la patria llorando está, parecen gritos
    de parto los que se oyen por allá.
  • And about Candida Martínez, a National Guardsman
    called to her, Come here girl, he said, Wash
    these pants for me.
  • The peasant girl was raped right there while
    Tacho laughed from a picture on the shelf.
  • Ay, ay, we didnt see anyone pass by. The black
    night swallows that torrential sorrow
  • Ay, ay, the nation is crying, they seem like the
    shrieks of labor pain, those cries you hear over
    there.

5
  • Retonaban los quiquiques, estaban la milpa en
    flor, cuando a la pobre Martínez la patrulla la
    agarró.
  • La indita abortó sentada con tanta interrogación
    me lo contó la quebrada que baja del Septentrión.
  • Ay, ay a nadie vimos pasar. La noche negra se
    traga aquel llanto torrencial
  • Ay, ay, la patria llorando está, parecen gritos
    de parto los que se oyen por allá.
  • The yucca plants sprouted, the cornfields were
    all in bloom, when the patrol grabbed poor Mrs.
    Martínez.
  • She miscarried right there, sitting down, under
    interrogation. The stream that flows from
    Septentrion told me her story.
  • Ay, ay, we didnt see anyone pass by. The black
    night swallows these torrential sorrows
  • Ay, ay, the nation is crying, they seem like
    shrieks of labor pain, those cries you hear over
    there.

6
  • Voy a hablarles compañeros de las mujeres del Cuá
    que bajaron de los cerros por orden del general
  • de la Maria Venancia y de la Amanda Aguilar dos
    hijas de la montaña (2x) que no quisieron hablar
    (2x)
  • Comrades, Im going to tell you about the women
    of Cuá who came down the hills by order of the
    General
  • About María Venancia and Amanda Aguilar, two
    daughters of the mountain (2x) who didnt want to
    talk (2x).

7
Legacies of widespread human rights abuse
  • Privatization of social life
  • Reluctance to speak about abuses
  • Reluctance to get politically involved
  • And yet, some came forward to form human rights
    groups
  • Many movements led by women
  • In part, women able to take advantage of role as
    mothers, wives to challenge state without
    appearing overtly political

8
Human rights boomerang
Civil society
Governments
Transnational HR org
ABUSE
Local HR org
Victims
9
When does the boomerang work well?
  • State violator
  • Acts of physical violence
  • Innocent or appealing victims
  • Direct responsibility
  • When does it not work well?
  • Violating state is a rogue state, or a very
    powerful state
  • HR violations not the result of discrete acts by
    easily-identifiable culprits may appear
    natural
  • Culprits more powerful than states

10
Limitations of the boomerang model
  • Works best against discrete violations of civil
    and political rights in relatively weak countries
  • Today, there are fewer cases of this sort in
    Latin America
  • Most human rights cases in the region today deal
    with social, economic, and cultural rights (think
    of struggles in context of globalization)
  • In part, this is a reflection of the gains of
    democracy (widespread c/p rights violations no
    longer happening)
  • But also a reflection of democracys limitations

11
Transitions to Democracy
  • Forces contributing to democratization
  • Economic downturn
  • States could no longer contain domestic unrest,
    needed to make concessions to opposition
  • States needed foreign investment to bolster
    ailing economies, and this depends on good
    international PR
  • Geopolitical changes
  • End of Cold War-gt US less willing to tolerate
    authoritarianism
  • Rise of HR movement put pressure on US for
    endorsing state terror
  • Political change within countries
  • As armed struggle waned, most reformers willing
    to accept limited reforms (c/p rights) rather
    than far reaching social transformations
  • In some countries, political leaders granted
    amnesties as an incentive for authoritarians to
    leave power

12
The democratic gamble
  • To end conflicts, reformers in many countries
    settled for limited c/p rights gains (formal
    democracy), without widespread social reforms
  • Many recognized that granting c/p rights alone
    would not address long-term causes of conflict,
    but banked on democratic gamble
  • For the most part, this didnt work
  • Why not?
  • Today, in many countries people question the
    value of formal democracy without wider social
    reforms -gt questioning of so-called Washington
    Consensus

13
Problemmatizing democracy
  • Democratic gamble notion that rights expand in
    concentric circles generations of rights

C/P Rights
SEC Rights
14
The traditional HR paradigm and its limitations
  • Savages-victims-saviors (Makau Mutua) certain
    assumptions underlie way boomerang works

15
Truth commissions
  • Common component of transitional justice is
    truth-telling
  • Assumption that remembering past prevents its
    repeat
  • How do truth commissions operate whose truth do
    they tell?

16
Greg Grandin
  • 20th century LatAm rewriting of understanding of
    what democracy was about
  • From state as arbiter of social justice to state
    as guarantor of individual rights
  • truth commissions explain history in ways that
    may be limiting
  • Define HR violations as disconnected from
    long-term political struggles, periods of
    violence as irrational, bounded
  • David Kennedy (2004) HR divides world into
    realms of reason and chaos
  • Truth commissions, by presenting an
    interpretation of history as a parable rather
    than as politics, largely denied the conditions
    that brought them into being. (20055)

17
Kimberly Theidon
  • How do we define what/who needs to be included?
  • Victim centered approaches
  • Efforts to be gender sensitive complex
  • Just inviting women to participate is not enough
    they dont talk about sexual violence
  • Creating women-only spaces is not enough this
    obscures other divisions
  • Why do we want them to talk?
  • Assumptions about therapeutic value of
    remembering
  • Assumptions about courageousness of speaking out
  • What acts are heroic? Womens narratives describe
    heroism in relation to other family, community
    members do we hear this as heroism or
    victimization?

18
Kimberly Theidon
  • Is expecting intimate narratives ethical? Might
    it be more heroic -- or healthy -- for survivors
    to insist their stories are private?
  • Should silence be respected?
  • When survivors talk, what is the obligation of
    the listener?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com