Publication | Closed Access
Globalization as Racialized, Sexualized Violence
93
Citations
28
References
2008
Year
ColonialismIndigenous PeopleIndigenous MovementFeminist DebateGlobal StudiesSocial SciencesAboriginal WomenSexual CulturesSettler ColonialismViolence Against WomenGender StudiesAfrican American StudiesTransnational FeminismsIndigenous WomenLateral ViolenceSexual ViolenceGender-based ViolenceFeminist ScholarshipIntersectionalityFeminist PerspectiveFeminist Political TheorySexualized ViolenceIndigenous FeminismsFeminist TheoryGlobalizationFeminist MethodologiesFeminist PhilosophyPrivate PiestewaIndigenous StudiesGlobal Gender JusticeAnthropology
Abstract In my article, I suggest that indigenous women are among the hardest hit by economic globalization – the expansion of markets, trade liberalization and cheapening of labour – and that globalization represents a multifaceted violence against indigenous women. I consider this with the help of two examples. First, I discuss the largely ignored case of missing and murdered Aboriginal women in Canada and how the interlocking systems of oppression (colonization, patriarchy and capitalism) are further intensified by globalization. Second, I examine the death of a Hopi woman, Private Piestewa, in the context of militarization, history of colonization and globalization. I analyse these examples in an intersectional framework that reveals the links between colonization, patriarchy and capitalism all of which inform the current processes of globalization. Keywords: global capitalismindigenous womenUS militaryviolence against womenwar on Iraq
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