Subtopic Deep Dive
Race and Gender Intersectionality in Latin America
Research Guide
What is Race and Gender Intersectionality in Latin America?
Race and gender intersectionality in Latin America examines overlapping discriminations faced by indigenous and Afro-Latin American women in accessing rights and experiencing violence.
Researchers apply intersectional frameworks to analyze historical and contemporary inequalities in countries like Brazil, Guatemala, Mexico, and Colombia. Key works include foundational papers like Sergio Antonio's 'Black Identities in Brazil' (2013, 31 citations) and recent studies such as Julia Zulver's 'Afro-Colombian Women’s Organisations' (2022, 2 citations). Over 10 papers from the provided list address these dynamics, with citation counts ranging from 2 to 61.
Why It Matters
This subtopic reveals how race compounds gender-based violence, as seen in Allison W. Reimann's analysis of Guatemalan women's asylum claims fleeing sexual violence (2009, 12 citations), informing policies on migrant rights. Matilde Ribeiro documents black women's acute discrimination in poverty and labor in Brazil (2008, 6 citations), guiding advocacy for social justice. Julia Zulver highlights Afro-Colombian women's mobilization against violent pluralism post-conflict (2022, 2 citations), shaping gender-racialized peacebuilding strategies.
Key Research Challenges
Data Scarcity on Indigenous Women
Quantitative data on violence against indigenous women remains limited, complicating statistical analysis. Vivian Jimenez-Estrada et al. note institutional policy failures in documenting violence in Mexico (2020, 2 citations). This gap hinders evidence-based interventions.
Intersectional Policy Implementation
Public policies often overlook race-gender intersections, as critiqued by Patricia Muñoz-Cabrera and Patrícia Rangel in analyses of Argentina, Brazil, and Chile (2018, 3 citations). States struggle to address entangled inequalities. Sérgio Costa examines state roles in Brazil's social policies (2017, 48 citations).
Historical Racial Identity Shifts
Evolving racial identities affect citizenship and mobility for Afro-Latinas. Sergio Antonio traces Brazil's changing black identities (2013, 31 citations). This temporal complexity challenges contemporary frameworks.
Essential Papers
Conviviality in Unequal Societies: Perspectives from Latin America Thematic Scope and Preliminary Research Programme
Maria Sibylla Merian Centre Conviviality-Inequality in Latin America · 2017 · 61 citations
The Maria Sibylla Merian International Centre for Advanced Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences Conviviality-Inequality in Latin America (Mecila) will study past and present forms of socia...
Entangled Inequalities, State, and Social Policies in Contemporary Brazil
Sérgio Costa · 2017 · 48 citations
Black Identities in Brazil
Sergio Antonio · 2013 · Refubium (Universitätsbibliothek der Freien Universität Berlin) · 31 citations
Brazil has had a distinctive definition of national and racial identity, and it has changed considerably over time, and at each time held out different possibilities for social mobility and citizen...
Hope for the Future - The Asylum Claims of Women Fleeing Sexual Violence in Guatemala
Allison W. Reimann · 2009 · Penn Carey Law Legal Scholarship Repository (University of Pennsylvania) · 12 citations
INTRODUCTION 1199 I. VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN IN GUATEMALA 1207 II. UNITED STATES ASYLUM LAW AND SEXUAL VIOLENCE 1215 A. A Well-Founded Fear of Persecution: Sexual Violence as Egregious Harm 1221 ...
Las mujeres negras en la lucha por sus derechos
Matilde Ribeiro · 2008 · Nueva sociedad · 6 citations
espanolComo demuestran los diversos indicadores de pobreza, educacion e insercion laboral, las mujeres negras sufren la discriminacion de manera particularmente aguda. En los ultimos anos, han ido ...
Upholding Birth Right Citizenship in the Dominican Republic
Bridget Wooding · 2016 · Iberoamericana – Nordic Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies · 5 citations
A fines de 2006, la estudiosa legal Van Waas hizo la importante pregunta sobre un estado permanente de ilegalidad siendo inevitable o no en República Dominicana, dado los desafíos prevalecientes pa...
Gender Justice in Feminist Analysis of Public Policies in Argentina, Brazil and Chile
Patricia Muñoz-Cabrera, Patrícia Rangel · 2018 · Revista Estudos Feministas · 3 citations
Abstract: This paper presents part of the authors’ postdoctoral research at the University of São Paulo, Brazil. It focuses on the transformation processes triggered by feminist-driven governmental...
Reading Guide
Foundational Papers
Start with Sergio Antonio (2013, 31 citations) for Brazil's racial identity evolution, Reimann (2009, 12 citations) for Guatemalan women's violence-asylum links, and Ribeiro (2008, 6 citations) for black women's discrimination indicators.
Recent Advances
Study Mecila's conviviality framework (2017, 61 citations), Zulver's Afro-Colombian mobilizations (2022, 2 citations), and Jimenez-Estrada et al.'s indigenous violence dialogues (2020, 2 citations).
Core Methods
Core methods feature intersectional policy analysis (Muñoz-Cabrera 2018), ethnographic studies of organizations (Zulver 2022), historical identity tracing (Antonio 2013), and binational violence documentation (Jimenez-Estrada 2020).
How PapersFlow Helps You Research Race and Gender Intersectionality in Latin America
Discover & Search
PapersFlow's Research Agent uses searchPapers and exaSearch to find papers like 'Afro-Colombian Women’s Organisations in Post-Accord Colombia' by Julia Zulver (2022), then citationGraph reveals connections to Sérgio Costa's 'Entangled Inequalities' (2017), and findSimilarPapers uncovers related works on indigenous violence.
Analyze & Verify
Analysis Agent employs readPaperContent on Reimann (2009) to extract violence statistics from Guatemala, verifies claims via verifyResponse (CoVe) against official reports, and runPythonAnalysis with pandas to quantify discrimination indicators from Ribeiro (2008); GRADE grading assesses evidence strength for asylum policy arguments.
Synthesize & Write
Synthesis Agent detects gaps in race-gender policy coverage across Muñoz-Cabrera (2018) and Costa (2017), flags contradictions in identity narratives from Antonio (2013); Writing Agent uses latexEditText, latexSyncCitations, and latexCompile to produce a review paper with exportMermaid diagrams of intersectional frameworks.
Use Cases
"Extract and plot poverty rates for black women in Brazil from Ribeiro 2008 and compare to national averages."
Research Agent → searchPapers('Ribeiro black women Brazil') → Analysis Agent → readPaperContent + runPythonAnalysis(pandas plot) → matplotlib graph of discrimination indicators.
"Draft LaTeX section on maquiladora feminicide intersecting with indigenous women's rights in Mexico."
Research Agent → exaSearch('maquilas feminicide Mexico') → Synthesis Agent → gap detection → Writing Agent → latexEditText + latexSyncCitations(Alilovic 1969) + latexCompile → formatted PDF section.
"Find code or datasets analyzing racial identities in Latin American surveys."
Research Agent → searchPapers('racial identity Brazil datasets') → Code Discovery → paperExtractUrls(Antonio 2013) → paperFindGithubRepo → githubRepoInspect → CSV export of mobility data.
Automated Workflows
Deep Research workflow conducts systematic review of 50+ papers via searchPapers on 'Afro-Latin American women violence', chaining citationGraph to Mecila (2017) and structured report on conviviality-inequality. DeepScan applies 7-step analysis with CoVe checkpoints to verify Zulver (2022) claims against Jimenez-Estrada (2020). Theorizer generates intersectional theory from Antonio (2013), Ribeiro (2008), and recent post-accord papers.
Frequently Asked Questions
What defines race and gender intersectionality in Latin America?
It examines overlapping discriminations faced by indigenous and Afro-Latin American women in rights access and violence, using frameworks from works like Costa (2017) and Ribeiro (2008).
What are key methods in this subtopic?
Methods include qualitative case studies of asylum claims (Reimann 2009), ethnographic analysis of mobilizations (Zulver 2022), and policy critiques (Muñoz-Cabrera 2018).
What are foundational papers?
Sergio Antonio's 'Black Identities in Brazil' (2013, 31 citations), Allison W. Reimann's Guatemala asylum study (2009, 12 citations), and Matilde Ribeiro's black women's rights (2008, 6 citations).
What open problems exist?
Challenges include scarce data on indigenous violence (Jimenez-Estrada 2020), policy gaps in entangled inequalities (Costa 2017), and post-conflict racialized violence (Zulver 2022).
Research Gender, Violence, Rights in Latin America with AI
PapersFlow provides specialized AI tools for Social Sciences researchers. Here are the most relevant for this topic:
Systematic Review
AI-powered evidence synthesis with documented search strategies
AI Literature Review
Automate paper discovery and synthesis across 474M+ papers
Deep Research Reports
Multi-source evidence synthesis with counter-evidence
Find Disagreement
Discover conflicting findings and counter-evidence
See how researchers in Social Sciences use PapersFlow
Field-specific workflows, example queries, and use cases.
Start Researching Race and Gender Intersectionality in Latin America with AI
Search 474M+ papers, run AI-powered literature reviews, and write with integrated citations — all in one workspace.
See how PapersFlow works for Social Sciences researchers