Women, Peace and Territory: Peacebuilding in Colombia through Ethnic and Gender Approaches

Keywords: Indigenous Women, Peacebuilding, Armed Conflict, Colombia, Peace Agreement

Abstract

Indigenous women have gone through different types of inequalities linked, historically, to their female gender and ethnicity. Their extensive fight against discrimination has led them to be more vulnerable to violations of their rights. The non-international armed conflict experienced in Colombia has aggravated and magnified this pernicious situation. In this context, the relevance of the role of indigenous women in the construction of peace is analyzed by means of their involvement in the Final Agreement with the FARC-EP and the current panorama at the negotiating table with the ELN. Similarly, a large number of challenges and threats facing this path towards total peace are exposed.

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Author Biography

Deborah Presta, Universitat de Lleida (UDL)

Déborah Presta Novello is a Margarita Salas postdoctoral researcher (funded by the European Union). Her research interests have focused on peacebuilding in Colombia, as well as the analysis of the human rights situation around the world, such as in the Near East. Her main teaching areas have been European Union Law and Human Rights and Gender.

Published
2024-09-27
Section
Articles