Books by Claudia Rivera Amarillo
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El libro La investigación sobre sexualidad en Colombia (1990-2004): Balance bibliográfico ofrece ... more El libro La investigación sobre sexualidad en Colombia (1990-2004): Balance bibliográfico ofrece un balance del conocimiento acumulado sobre la sexualidad en el ámbito de diversas disciplinas que han aportado a la construcción de esta temática como objeto de investigación en Colombia. El volumen realizado de manera conjunta por el CLAM y la Escuela de Estudios de Género de la Universidad Nacional de Colombia, sede Bogotá se inscribe en un proyecto de mayor envergadura impulsado por el CLAM en colaboración con investigadores de varios países de América Latina, que busca aportar a la elaboración de una agenda de estudios sobre sexualidad con una perspectiva de derechos, e influir en los debates públicos sobre el tema en la región. La investigación estuvo a cargo de Mauro Brigeiro (coord.), Marco Alejandro Melo, Claudia Rivera Amarillo y Manuel Alejandro Rodríguez Rondón.
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Conference Presentations by Claudia Rivera Amarillo
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Papers by Claudia Rivera Amarillo
Universitas Humanística, 2017
Diana Bonnett Vélez (Ed. Académica) Bogotá: Escuela de Ciencias Humanas, Editorial Universidad ... more Diana Bonnett Vélez (Ed. Académica) Bogotá: Escuela de Ciencias Humanas, Editorial Universidad del Rosario, 2015. 155 pp.
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Centro Latinoamericano en Sexualidad y Derechos Humanos (CLAM )/IMS-UERJ,, 2012
Este libro presenta un balance crítico de las investigaciones sobre sexualidad del campo de las c... more Este libro presenta un balance crítico de las investigaciones sobre sexualidad del campo de las ciencias sociales y humanas realizadas en Colombia entre los años de 1990 y 2004. Tiene como propósito presentar un amplio panorama de los estudios disponibles, así como exponer los procedimientos metodológicos y los hallazgos más destacados de la literatura revisada. La propuesta de inventariar la producción bibliográfica sobre sexualidad en el país es una iniciativa promovida por el Centro Latinoamericano en Sexualidad y Derechos Humanos (CLAM) y llevada a cabo en el seno del Grupo de Estudios en Género, Sexualidad y Salud en América Latina (GESSAM), adscrito a la Escuela de Estudios de Género de la Universidad Nacional de Colombia. Con la intención de realizar un balance del conjunto de las investigaciones sobre sexualidad en la región, en el marco de las actividades del CLAM, estados del arte similares fueron realizados en Brasil, Argentina, Chile y México (de próxima publicación). En Colombia los temas relacionados con la sexualidad han convocado de manera creciente a investigadores de diferentes áreas. Pese a su reciente conformación como campo de interés (que data principalmente de la década de 1990), importantes recopilaciones y ensayos ya recogen las principales discusiones sobre estas temáticas en el país. La producción de tesis de pregrado y posgrado con foco en este ámbito es cada vez mayor, así como la divulgación de investigaciones en seminarios y congresos. Si se considera el reducido número de investigadores y grupos dedicados a este tema, puede afirmarse que su institucionalización en el ámbito académico está todavía en curso. Además de los trabajos realizados en el ámbito universitario, la labor empírica de producir conocimiento sobre sexualidad en Colombia ha sido liderada por entidades del Estado y organizaciones no gubernamentales (ONG), que han contribuido a la configuración de un panorama bastante plural de este campo
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Nómadas, 2019
El artículo reflexiona sobre las prácticas de disciplinamiento de los cuerpos que hacen etnografí... more El artículo reflexiona sobre las prácticas de disciplinamiento de los cuerpos que hacen etnografía; para ello, explora la formación en pregrado en ciencias sociales en Colombia. Se basa en el análisis de 32 programas de enseñanza de metodologías cualitativas y en un proyecto de investigación sobre formación a estudiantes. Encuentra que ese entrenamiento se apoya en la comprensión del etnógrafo como un cuerpo capaz, valiente y masculino. Retoma la expresión “princesa antropóloga” para hacer referencia a ese proceso de disciplinamiento que produce cuerpos fuera de lugar y “el campo” como un lugar agreste.
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Gender, Place & Culture
In 2016, during the Zika epidemic, scientists discovered another disturbing effect of the virus: ... more In 2016, during the Zika epidemic, scientists discovered another disturbing effect of the virus: pregnant women with the Zika virus faced the risk of having babies with microcephaly. Governments and international organizations responded by encouraging women to delay pregnancy and also by surveying their domestic spaces and water management practices. Feminist scholars and activists criticized these measures as ignoring barriers to quality reproductive health services and women’s particular vulnerabilities to climate change, as the virus was soon associated with global warming. This article critically analyzes the unequal and differentiated position of women during the 2015–2016 Zika outbreak. Through the concept of the Zika assemblage, we discuss how populationist interventions upon women’s bodies also involved particular representations of these bodies within different spaces and scales, from the household to the local and the global. We consider the geographical imaginaries and realities that shaped the identities and bodies of those women, as well as their connections with geopolitical notions of security and emergency. In this way, we expose how impoverished women from the Global South ended up bearing the responsibility to maintain an international epidemiological order. The article concludes with a reflection on the dissonance between populationist interventions and the root causes of climate change and environmental injustice.
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Sexualidad, Salud y Sociedad (Rio de Janeiro)
Resumen Este artículo plantea conexiones entre el objeto “ideología de género”, la tecno-ciencia ... more Resumen Este artículo plantea conexiones entre el objeto “ideología de género”, la tecno-ciencia y las tecnologías de sexo y género en la reciente epidemia de Zika. Para ello considera las tácticas de lucha contra el Aedes aegypti, centrándose en los insectos modificados y tomando como ejemplos Colombia, Puerto Rico y Brasil. Se plantea una relación entre la bacteria Wolbachia y el feminismo a partir de la reflexión sobre su potencial para intervenir la sustancia misma de la vida deshaciendo, así, la diferencia sexual y feminizando el aegypti. De este modo, se establece un campo de sentido que articula las ciencias de la vida, el capitalismo, la epidemia de Zika, las zancudas y el objeto “ideología de género”; en este campo, las mujeres ocupan el lugar de eternas deudoras en una economía política de la promesa, el neurotropismo del zika amenaza futuros nacionales y economías en gestación, y la Wolbachia aparece como salvadora y destructora al mismo tiempo.
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NACLA Report on the Americas
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Gender, Place and Culture, 2019
In 2016, during the Zika epidemic, scientists discovered
another disturbing effect of the virus: ... more In 2016, during the Zika epidemic, scientists discovered
another disturbing effect of the virus: pregnant women
with the Zika virus faced the risk of having babies with
microcephaly. Governments and international organizations
responded by encouraging women to delay pregnancy and
also by surveying their domestic spaces and water management
practices. Feminist scholars and activists criticized
these measures as ignoring barriers to quality reproductive
health services and women’s particular vulnerabilities to climate
change, as the virus was soon associated with global
warming. This article critically analyzes the unequal and differentiated
position of women during the 2015–2016 Zika
outbreak. Through the concept of the Zika assemblage, we
discuss how populationist interventions upon women’s
bodies also involved particular representations of these
bodies within different spaces and scales, from the household
to the local and the global. We consider the geographical
imaginaries and realities that shaped the
identities and bodies of those women, as well as their connections
with geopolitical notions of security and emergency.
In this way, we expose how impoverished women
from the Global South ended up bearing the responsibility
to maintain an international epidemiological order. The article
concludes with a reflection on the dissonance between
populationist interventions and the root causes of climate
change and environmental injustice.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
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Books by Claudia Rivera Amarillo
Conference Presentations by Claudia Rivera Amarillo
Papers by Claudia Rivera Amarillo
another disturbing effect of the virus: pregnant women
with the Zika virus faced the risk of having babies with
microcephaly. Governments and international organizations
responded by encouraging women to delay pregnancy and
also by surveying their domestic spaces and water management
practices. Feminist scholars and activists criticized
these measures as ignoring barriers to quality reproductive
health services and women’s particular vulnerabilities to climate
change, as the virus was soon associated with global
warming. This article critically analyzes the unequal and differentiated
position of women during the 2015–2016 Zika
outbreak. Through the concept of the Zika assemblage, we
discuss how populationist interventions upon women’s
bodies also involved particular representations of these
bodies within different spaces and scales, from the household
to the local and the global. We consider the geographical
imaginaries and realities that shaped the
identities and bodies of those women, as well as their connections
with geopolitical notions of security and emergency.
In this way, we expose how impoverished women
from the Global South ended up bearing the responsibility
to maintain an international epidemiological order. The article
concludes with a reflection on the dissonance between
populationist interventions and the root causes of climate
change and environmental injustice.
another disturbing effect of the virus: pregnant women
with the Zika virus faced the risk of having babies with
microcephaly. Governments and international organizations
responded by encouraging women to delay pregnancy and
also by surveying their domestic spaces and water management
practices. Feminist scholars and activists criticized
these measures as ignoring barriers to quality reproductive
health services and women’s particular vulnerabilities to climate
change, as the virus was soon associated with global
warming. This article critically analyzes the unequal and differentiated
position of women during the 2015–2016 Zika
outbreak. Through the concept of the Zika assemblage, we
discuss how populationist interventions upon women’s
bodies also involved particular representations of these
bodies within different spaces and scales, from the household
to the local and the global. We consider the geographical
imaginaries and realities that shaped the
identities and bodies of those women, as well as their connections
with geopolitical notions of security and emergency.
In this way, we expose how impoverished women
from the Global South ended up bearing the responsibility
to maintain an international epidemiological order. The article
concludes with a reflection on the dissonance between
populationist interventions and the root causes of climate
change and environmental injustice.