Silent Crusade? Indigenous Women in Taiwanese Indigenous Movements
Keywords:
indigenous peoples, social movement, collective rights, justiceAbstract
Among the various indigenous rights movements across different times in Taiwan, the presence of indigenous women often goes obscure. Although in recent years there has been a great deal of publications on Taiwanese indigenous movements, some of the literature —constructed under the structure of the indigenous knowledge system—, while insisting on the status and value of indigenous autonomy, tend to overlook the historical context in Taiwanese society of indigenous women who participated in social movements. What are the issues of concern? This paper primarily serves to reveal the “silent crusades” and to bring forward the directions of interests of the indigenous women’s movements by analyzing related reports, autobiographies, interview transcripts, texts, etc. spanning over two decades and published in the weekly newspaper of the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan (PCT), Taiwan Church News, in addition to in-depth interviews with the leaders of indigenous women’s social movements.Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
The Author retains ownership of the copyright in this article and grants Lectora: revista de dones i textualitat the rights to print publication of the Article. The work will be available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works license, by which the article must be credited to the Author and the Journal be credited as first place of publication.
The Author is free to enter in seperate, additional contractual agreements for the non-exclusive distribution of the work as published in this journal (such as institutional repositories or a book), as long as the original publication in Lectora is credited.
The Author is encouraged to post the work online (eg in institutional or thematic repositories, or in their website), as it can lead to productive exchanges as well as to a greater citation of the published work (see The Effect of Open Access).