INTERSECTIONALITIES THAT CONDEMN: COLONIAL GESTURES OF THE ARGENTINEAN JUDICIAL SYSTEM
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to explore the challenges of intersectionality in the public policy-making process in Argentina, in order to think about the colonialism ingrained within State structures in general and its judicial system in particular. To that end, this proposal is based on the analysis of a legal process that in 2014 condemned to a life sentence a Bolivian migrant woman, indigenous (Quechua-speaker who do not understand Spanish), poor and a victim of violence, who spent more than one year in jail along with her baby accused of murdering her husband, without comprehending the legal process by which she was detained. This case, which gathers in a woman’s body different intersections of social inequalities, reveals the absence of public policies oriented to respond to these intersections.
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