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Full Description
In Come Hell or High Water: Feminism and the Legacy of Armed Conflict in Central America, Tine Destrooper analyses the political projects of feminist activists in light of their experience as former revolutionaries. She compares the Guatemalan and Nicaraguan experience to underline the importance of ethnicity for women's activism during and after the civil conflict. The book combines a micro- and macro-level analysis to present a sound understanding of post-conflict women's activism.
Contents
List of illustrations and tables
Abbreviations
Preface and acknowledgements
Introduction
PART I: THE INFLUENCE OF CONFLICT AND ITS AFTERMATH ON THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT
1. A social history of the women's movement in Guatemala and Nicaragua
2. Social movement spillover and organizational learning in the post-conflict women's movement
3. Is there a real women's movement? Cooperation, fragmentation and divisions in the movement
4. Shifting paradigms: womanhood as a political strategy
PART II: COMPLEMENTARY APPROACHES TO WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT
5. Revisiting mainstream feminist approaches
6. Indigenous feminism and its experience-based approach to women's empowerment
7. The socio-political value of an experience-based approach. Rethinking strategies of collective action
Conclusion: New perspectives for female mobilization
Alphabetical overview of interviewees
Bibliography
Index