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Multiple Injustices Critical Issues in Indigenous Studies
MULTIPLE INJUSTICES CRITICAL ISSUES IN Indigenous STUDIES Jeffrey P. Shepherd and Myla Vicenti Carpio series editors advisory board Hokulani Aikau Jennifer Nez Denetdale Eva Marie Garroutte John Maynard Alejandra Navarro-Smith Gladys Tzul Keith Camacho Margaret Elizabeth Kovach Vicente Diaz R. AÍDA HERNÁNDEZ CASTILLO MULTIPLE INJUSTICES Indigenous Women, Law, and Political Struggle in Latin America TUCSON The University of Arizona Press www.uapress.arizona.edu © 2016 The Arizona Board of Regents All rights reserved. Published 2016 Printed in the United States of America 21 20 19 18 17 16 6 5 4 3 2 1 ISBN-13: 978-0-8165-3249-0 (cloth) Cover design by Leigh McDonald Cover illustration produced in Pilar Hinojosa’s Sumi-e workshop in the Feminine Prison of Atlacholoaya, Morelos. Publication of this book is made possible in part by the proceeds of a permanent endowment created with the assistance of a Challenge Grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, a federal agency. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data [to come] This paper meets the requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (Permanence of Paper). CONTENTS List of Illustrations vii Acknowledgments ix Introduction 3 1 Activist Research on Justice and Indigenous Women’s Rights 33 2 Multiple Dialogues and Struggles for Justice: Political Genealogies of Indigenous Women in Mexico, Guatemala, and Colombia 67 3 Indigenous Justices: New Spaces of Struggle for Women 123 4 From Victims to Human Rights Defenders: International Litigation and the Struggle for Justice of Indigenous Women 163 5 From the Multicultural State to the Penal State: Incarcerated Indigenous Women and the Criminalization of Poverty 190 Final Thoughts 229 Appendix 1. -
Plan Municipal De Desarrollo 2018-2021
PLAN MUNICIPAL DE DESARROLLO 2018-2021 FILOMENO MATA, VER. INDICE Pag. I. Introducción ……………………………………………………………… …. 4 II. Marco Jurídico ……………………………………………………………..... 5 III. Diagnóstico Municipal ………………………………………………………. 7 a. Aspectos generales del Municipio …………………………………….. 7 b. Características geográficas y territoriales ……………………………. 7 c. Características demográficas …………………………………………. 8 d. Organización Política ………………………………………………… 10 e. Indicadores de marginación y pobreza …………………………....... 10 f. Información sectorial …………………………………………………. 11 i. Educación ………………………………………………………. 12 ii. Salud ……………………………………………………………. 13 iii. Vivienda y Servicios Públicos …………………………….……14 iv. Seguridad y Gobernanza ……………………………………….14 1. Seguridad Pública ……………………………………… 14 a) Derechos humanos ……………………………. 16 b) Protección civil …………………………………. 17 2. Gobernanza …………………………………………….. 19 a) Estrategias ……………………………………… 19 b) Austeridad ………………………………………. 19 c) Participación ciudadana ………………………. 20 d) Bienestar Social ………………………………. 20 e) Salud …………………………………………… 20 f) Juventud ……………………………………….. 20 g) Atención a grupos vulnerables ………………. 21 h) Organigrama …………………………………… 22 i) Misión, Visión y Valores ………………………. 23 v. Movilidad Urbana ………………………………………………. 24 vi. Actividades Económicas ... …………………………………… 25 g. Prospectiva ……………………………………………………………... 26 IV. Análisis FODA (Fortalezas y Oportunidades, Debilidades y Amenazas) ……………………………………………………………………………… 27 a. Problemática Generales ... …………………………………………. 30 V. V. Alineación de los Objetivos Municipales de Desarrollo con los -
Check List Lists of Species Check List 12(1): 1833, 24 January 2016 Doi: ISSN 1809-127X © 2016 Check List and Authors
12 1 1833 the journal of biodiversity data 24 January 2016 Check List LISTS OF SPECIES Check List 12(1): 1833, 24 January 2016 doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.15560/12.1.1833 ISSN 1809-127X © 2016 Check List and Authors Carnivores (Mammalia) from areas of Nearctic–Neotropical transition in Puebla, central Mexico: presence, distribution, and conservation Osvaldo Eric Ramírez-Bravo1, 2* and Lorna Hernandez-Santin3 1 Durrell Institute for Conservation Ecology, Marlowe Building, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7NR, England 2 Departamento de Ciencias Químico-Biológicas, Universidad de las Américas, Puebla, Santa Catarina Mártir, Sin Número, Cholula, Puebla. CP. 72820, México 3 School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia * Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected] Abstract: The Nearctic and Neotropical realms converge and Neotropical realms meet. Thus, Puebla contains in central Mexico, where many areas have not been a wide variety of habitats that range from semi-arid adequately characterized. Our objective was to revise to tropical rain forest, including cloud forests, oak the distribution and conservation status of carnivores in forests, pine forests, tropical dry forests, and xeric scrub the state of Puebla, central Mexico. Between September (Ramírez-Pulido et al. 2005). Elevation in the region 2008 and January 2011, we conducted interviews varies widely ranging from a minimum of 200 m on the and fieldwork on seven previously selected areas. We coastal plains of the Gulf of Mexico up to a maximum of complemented our data with bibliographical research. 5,700 m at the Pico de Orizaba, with abrupt variations We obtained 733 records for 21 species, representing on its four different mountain ranges (Ramírez-Pulido 63% of the carnivores reported for Mexico. -
Cazones De Herrera, Ver
MUNICIPIO DE CAZONES DE HERRERA, VER. FISCALIZACIÓN DE LA CUENTA PÚBLICA 2012 RESULTADO DE LA FASE DE COMPROBACIÓN ÍNDICE PÁGS. 1. FUNDAMENTACIÓN ............................................................................................................................59 2. OBJETIVO DE LA FISCALIZACIÓN ..................................................................................................... 59 3. ÁREAS REVISADAS ............................................................................................................................ 59 4. RESULTADO DE LA REVISIÓN DE LA CUENTA PÚBLICA ................................................................. 60 4.1. EVALUACIÓN DE LA GESTIÓN FINANCIERA ................................................................. 60 4.1.1. CUMPLIMIENTO DE LAS DISPOSICIONES APLICABLES AL EJERCICIO DE LOS RECURSOS PÚBLICOS................................................................................................... 60 4.1.2. ANÁLISIS PRESUPUESTAL ............................................................................................ 60 4.1.2.1. INGRESOS Y EGRESOS ......................................................................................... 60 4.2. CUMPLIMIENTO DE LOS OBJETIVOS Y METAS DE LOS PROGRAMAS APLICADOS 63 4.2.1. INGRESOS PROPIOS ...................................................................................................... 63 4.2.2. FONDO PARA LA INFRAESTRUCTURA SOCIAL MUNICIPAL (FISM) ......................... 64 4.2.3. FONDO DE APORTACIONES PARA EL FORTALECIMIENTO -
Mapa De Veracruz De Ignacio De La Llave. División Municipal
Veracruz de Ignacio de la Llave N O E 1 S 203 161 150 102 114 183 150154 060 155 150 109 129 063035 151 042 T1amaulipas50 013 192 056 153 023 078 154 055 034 197 150 056 055 167 010 163 095 060 096 057 187106 50 107 156 002 133 058 177 036 166 013 1213 51 160 009 189 086 194 132 112 152 136 093 53 027 026 076 001182 087 004 034 128 205 121 202 083 157 033 025 092 065 7 175 038 San Luis Potosí 170 161 150 180 025164 154 079 088 134 150 131 046 017 060 024 155 063 150 198 129 035 013 071521 069 056 153 162 078 040 1 055 034 056 051 124 188 160 055 167 158 179 189 066 146 058 037 160 103 064 211 071 043 Hidalgo 189 067 050 008 14 027 203 029 076 047 165 200 102 114 180680 007 202 083 157 183 062 175 033 127 170 180 109 101 022 044 131 042 192 068 021 125 072 198 023 081 157 00340 3 069 124 Golfo de México 197 138118 085 196 051 158 010 163 099 101595135 014 175 066 074 113 053 031 037 030 187001986 057 185 041 052 067103 064 211 106 140098 050 107 156 002 203 102 114 177 036 166 104709 168 086 194 112 117 183 132 006 137 131 136020693 020 201 109 042 192 023 001182 087 195 001471 197 128 184 010 163 095 110 173 096 057 092 065 191 061987106 025 019 156 107 002166 038 159 040 177 036 009 164 086 194 112 025 016 132 093 079 088 134 136026 046 024 017 051 124 128 001182 087 004 150658 191 162 025 092 126 038 188 193 079025164 088 134 016 146 179 193 066 046 024 017 028 037 162 126 071 043 188 193 100 146 179 193 008 148 064 028 029 103 071 024311 047 080 165 200 067 008 148 100 186 007 090 050 029 047 080 165 200 127 062 186 007 090 Escala -
Ley De Coordinacion Fiscal Para El Estado Y Los Municipios De Veracruz De Ignacio De La Llave
LEY DE COORDINACION FISCAL PARA EL ESTADO Y LOS MUNICIPIOS DE VERACRUZ DE IGNACIO DE LA LLAVE. ULTIMA REFORMA PUBLICADA EN LA GACETA OFICIAL: 12 DE DICIEMBRE DE 2008. Ley publicada en la Gaceta Oficial. Órgano del Gobierno del Estado de Veracruz de Ignacio de la Llave, el jueves 30 de diciembre de 1999. Al margen un sello que dice: Estados Unidos Mexicanos.-Gobernador del Estado de Veracruz- Llave. Miguel Alemán Velazco, Gobernador Constitucional del Estado Libre y Soberano de Veracruz- Llave, a sus habitantes sabed: Que la H. Legislatura del Estado se ha servido dirigirme la siguiente Ley para su promulgación: Al margen un sello con el Escudo Nacional que dice: Estados Unidos Mexicanos.—Poder Legislativo.—Estado Libre y Soberano de Veracruz-Llave. "La Honorable Quincuagésima Octava Legislatura del Estado Libre y Soberano de Veracruz-Llave, en uso de la facultad que le confieren los artículos 68, fracción I de la Constitución Política Local; 44 de la Ley Orgánica del Poder Legislativo; 103 del Reglamento para el Gobierno Interior del Poder Legislativo y en nombre del pueblo, expide la siguiente: LEY NÚMERO 44 (REFORMADA SU DENOMINACION POR ARTICULO TERCERO TRANSITORIO DE LA CONSTITUCION POLITICA LOCAL, G.O. 18 DE MARZO DE 2003) DE COORDINACIÓN FISCAL PARA EL ESTADO Y LOS MUNICIPIOS DE VERACRUZ DE IGNACIO DE LA LLAVE CAPÍTULO I Disposiciones generales Artículo 1.La presente Ley establece y regula el Sistema Estatal de Coordinación Fiscal; y tiene por objeto: I. Establecer y regular los fondos para la distribución de las participaciones federales a los municipios; II. Establecer las reglas para la distribución de otros ingresos federales o estatales que se les transfieran a los municipios; III. -
AGROINDUSTRIALES EN CÍTRICOS DE ÁLAMO, VERACRUZ Investigación Administrativa, Núm
Investigación Administrativa ISSN: 1870-6614 [email protected] Escuela Superior de Comercio y Administración, Unidad Santo Tomás México Bada Carbajal, Lila Margarita; Ramírez Hernández, Zarahemla; López Velázquez, Miguel Ángel COMPETITIVIDAD DE LAS PEQUEÑAS Y MEDIANAS EMPRESAS (PYMES) AGROINDUSTRIALES EN CÍTRICOS DE ÁLAMO, VERACRUZ Investigación Administrativa, núm. 111, enero-junio, 2013, pp. 66-81 Escuela Superior de Comercio y Administración, Unidad Santo Tomás Distrito Federal, México Disponible en: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=456045215005 Cómo citar el artículo Número completo Sistema de Información Científica Más información del artículo Red de Revistas Científicas de América Latina, el Caribe, España y Portugal Página de la revista en redalyc.org Proyecto académico sin fines de lucro, desarrollado bajo la iniciativa de acceso abierto COMPETITIVIDAD DE LAS PEQUEÑAS Y MEDIANAS EMPRESAS (PYMES) AGROINDUSTRIALES EN CÍTRICOS DE ÁLAMO, VERACRUZ COMPETITIVENESS OF SMALL BUSINESS AGRO-INDUSTRIAL CITRUS FROM ALAMO, VERACRUZ, MEXICO Lila Margarita Bada Carbajal (1) Zarahemla Ramírez Hernández (2) Miguel Ángel López Velázquez (3) ABSTRACT This research analyzed Small Business (PYMES) competitiveness on agro-industrial from Alamo Temapache, Veracruz, Mexico. To develop the analysis, it was used the application of the diamond model (Porter, 1990) and the five forces model (Porter, 1979). The purpose of this research is to know the advantage competitive of those enterprises agro-industrial citrus sector from Alamo Temapache, Veracruz. The main contribution of this work lies in the analysis of competitiveness of PYMES under study by two models mentioned above. The competitive advantage of these companies is that they have technology that allows you to produce high quality products and efficient production process that allows you to reduce costs and operate in a profitable business long term because they are in a little competitive environment. -
The Toro Historical Review
THE TORO HISTORICAL REVIEW Native Communities in Colonial Mexico Under Spanish Colonial Rule Vannessa Smith THE TORO HISTORICAL REVIEW Prior to World War II and the subsequent social rights movements, historical scholarship on colonial Mexico typically focused on primary sources left behind by Iberians, thus revealing primarily Iberian perspectives. By the 1950s, however, the approach to covering colonial Mexican history changed with the scholarship of Charles Gibson, who integrated Nahuatl cabildo records into his research on Tlaxcala.1 Nevertheless, in his subsequent book The Aztecs under Spanish Rule Gibson went back to predominantly Spanish sources and thus an Iberian lens to his research.2 It was not until the 1970s and 80s that U.S. scholars, under the leadership of James Lockhart, developed a methodology called the New Philology, which focuses on native- language driven research on colonial Mexican history.3 The New Philology has become an important research method in the examination of native communities and the ways in which they changed and adapted to Spanish rule while also holding on to some of their own social and cultural practices and traditions. This historiography focuses on continuities and changes in indigenous communities, particularly the evolution of indigenous socio-political structures and socio-economic relationships under Spanish rule, in three regions of Mexico: Central Mexico, Yucatan, and Oaxaca. Pre-Conquest Community Structure As previously mentioned, Lockhart provided the first scholarship following the New Philology methodology in the United States and applied it to Central Mexico. In his book, The Nahuas After the Conquest, Lockhart lays out the basic structure of Nahua communities in great detail.4 The Nahua, the prominent indigenous group in Central Mexico, organized into communities called altepetl. -
COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL NOT for DISTRIBUTION Figure 0.3
Contents Acknowledgments ix A Brief Note on Usage xiii Introduction: History and Tlaxilacalli 3 Chapter 1: The Rise of Tlaxilacalli, ca. 1272–1454 40 Chapter 2: Acolhua Imperialisms, ca. 1420s–1583 75 Chapter 3: Community and Change in Cuauhtepoztlan Tlaxilacalli, ca. 1544–1575 97 Chapter 4: Tlaxilacalli Religions, 1537–1587 123 COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL Chapter 5: TlaxilacalliNOT FOR Ascendant, DISTRIBUTION 1562–1613 151 Chapter 6: Communities Reborn, 1581–1692 174 Conclusion: Tlaxilacalli and Barrio 203 List of Acronyms Used Frequently in This Book 208 Bibliography 209 Index 247 vii introduction History and Tlaxilacalli This is the story of how poor, everyday central Mexicans built and rebuilt autono- mous communities over the course of four centuries and two empires. It is also the story of how these self-same commoners constructed the unequal bonds of compul- sion and difference that anchored these vigorous and often beloved communities. It is a story about certain face-to-face human networks, called tlaxilacalli in both singular and plural,1 and about how such networks molded the shape of both the Aztec and Spanish rule.2 Despite this influence, however, tlaxilacalli remain ignored, subordinated as they often were to wider political configurations and most often appearing unmarked—that is, noted by proper name only—in the sources. With care, however, COPYRIGHTEDthe deeper stories of tlaxilacalli canMATERIAL be uncovered. This, in turn, lays bare a root-level history of autonomy and colonialism in central Mexico, told through the powerfulNOT and transformative FOR DISTRIBUTION tlaxilacalli. The robustness of tlaxilacalli over thelongue durée casts new and surprising light on the structures of empire in central Mexico, revealing a counterpoint of weakness and fragmentation in the canonical histories of centralizing power in the region. -
A Mat of Serpents: Aztec Strategies of Control from an Empire in Decline
A Mat of Serpents: Aztec Strategies of Control from an Empire in Decline Jerónimo Reyes On my honor, Professors Andrea Lepage and Elliot King mark the only aid to this thesis. “… the ruler sits on the serpent mat, and the crown and the skull in front of him indicate… that if he maintained his place on the mat, the reward was rulership, and if he lost control, the result was death.” - Aztec rulership metaphor1 1 Emily Umberger, " The Metaphorical Underpinnings of Aztec History: The Case of the 1473 Civil War," Ancient Mesoamerica 18, 1 (2007): 18. I dedicate this thesis to my mom, my sister, and my brother for teaching me what family is, to Professor Andrea Lepage for helping me learn about my people, to Professors George Bent, and Melissa Kerin for giving me the words necessary to find my voice, and to everyone and anyone finding their identity within the self and the other. Table of Contents List of Illustrations ………………………………………………………………… page 5 Introduction: Threads Become Tapestry ………………………………………… page 6 Chapter I: The Sum of its Parts ………………………………………………… page 15 Chapter II: Commodification ………………………………………………… page 25 Commodification of History ………………………………………… page 28 Commodification of Religion ………………………………………… page 34 Commodification of the People ………………………………………… page 44 Conclusion ……………………………………………………………………... page 53 Illustrations ……………………………………………………………………... page 54 Appendices ……………………………………………………………………... page 58 Bibliography ……………………………………………………………………... page 60 …. List of Illustrations Figure 1: Statue of Coatlicue, Late Period, 1439 (disputed) Figure 2: Peasant Ritual Figurines, Date Unknown Figure 3: Tula Warrior Figure Figure 4: Mexica copy of Tula Warrior Figure, Late Aztec Period Figure 5: Coyolxauhqui Stone, Late Aztec Period, 1473 Figure 6: Male Coyolxauhqui, carving on greenstone pendant, found in cache beneath the Coyolxauhqui Stone, Date Unknown Figure 7: Vessel with Tezcatlipoca Relief, Late Aztec Period, ca. -
Diario De Los Debates
DIARIO DE LOS DEBATES DIPUTACIÓN PERMANENTE SEGUNDO RECESO SEGUNDO AÑO DE EJERCICIO CONSTITUCIONAL SEPTIEMBRE 2006 XALAPA-ENRÍQUEZ, VERACRUZ DE IGNACIO DE LA LLAVE Mesa Directiva Dip. Ramiro de la Vequia Bernardi Presidente Dip. José Adrían Solís Aguilar Vicepresidente Dip. Gladys Merlín Castro Secretaria Secretaría General Lic. Francisco Javier Loyo Ramos DIARIO Secretaría de Servicios Legislativos Arq. Rolando Eugenio Andrade Mora Dirección de Registro Documental DE LOS Legislativo y Publicaciones Oficiales LAE. Víctor Román Jiménez Rodríguez Departamento del Diario de los Debates DEBATES Lic. César Augusto Moreno Collado Edición, Corrección y Estilo Fernando Aarón Ruiz Carral Versión Estenográfica Lizbeth Cortez Jiménez Fabiola Meredith Martínez López Elizabeth Solano López Segundo Receso Diputación Permanente Segundo Año de Ejercicio Constitucional Año 2 Volumen VII Tomo 2 Septiembre 2006 C O N T E N I D O 1. TERCERA SESIÓN ORDINARIA........................................................................... 1 (8 de septiembre de 2006) 2. CUARTA SESIÓN ORDINARIA............................................................................ 145 (27 de septiembre de 2006) Honorable Congreso del Estado Libre y Soberano de Veracruz de Ignacio de la Llave I Departamento del Diario de los Debates Segundo Receso Diputación Permanente Segundo Año de Ejercicio Constitucional Año 2 Volumen VII Tomo 2 Septiembre 2006 II Honorable Congreso del Estado Libre y Soberano de Veracruz de Ignacio de la Llave Departamento del Diario de los Debates Segundo Receso Diputación Permanente Segundo Año de Ejercicio Constitucional Año 2 Volumen VII Tomo 2 Septiembre 2006 ÍNDICE TEMÁTICO TERCERA SESIÓN ORDINARIA……………………………………………………………………... 1 (8 de septiembre de 2006) • Lista de asistencia. …………………………………………………………………. 1 • Lectura y, en su caso, aprobación del proyecto del orden del día……… 1 • Lectura y, en su caso, aprobación del acta de la sesión anterior………. -
Title: an Ethnobotanical Study of Medicinal Plants Used in Papantla
Title: An ethnobotanical study of medicinal plants used in Papantla, Veracruz, Mexico. Abstract: Ethnomedicine is still used as primary health care resource by several indigenous communities and people who live in rural areas. In Mexico, most of the indigenous population live in rural areas (61.1% in communities with less than 2,500 inhabitants). The aim of this study was to record, analyze and identify the medical plant knowledge of the Totonaca Ethnic group in Totonacapan region in the state of Veracruz, Mexico. The Totonacos descendants are keen consumers and have a historical background with traditional medicinal uses and are well-known for preserving a wide variety of plants. In the present study, semi-structured interviews were performed with 85 informants aged between 18-85 years old (53% male and 47% female). Ethnomedicinal indexes were applied to analyze the collected data. A total of 102 medicinal plant species belonging to 94 genera and 52 families were documented. The families Asteraceae (111 UR) and Rutaceae (99 UR) have the highest number of species with eight plants each one and were the best-represented families in the study area. The highest Informant Consensus Factor (ICF) was calculated for the autoimmune diseases (ICF=0.91) with a unique ailment of cancer. The highest number of Use Report (N=251) was determined for the diseases of the digestive and gastrointestinal system. The most culturally important species was Hamelia patens Jacq., obtaining the highest Importance Cultural Index (CI) with 0.906 (77 UR), it presented the widest spectrum to treat problems followed by Persea americana Mill, with CI=0.682 (58UR) which is used to treat gastric problems.