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"In 2003, Perâu's Comisiâon de la Verdad y Reconciliaciâon (CVR) issued its groundbreaking final report on the human rights abuses perpetuated by two revolutionary groups and the country's armed forces and police from 1980 to 2000. Sylvanna M. Falcâon examines how local communities in Lima have formed oppositional spaces, movements, and communities to challenge a status quo that erases Perâu's history of internal violence. These counterpublics focus on human rights-oriented memory that acknowledges the legacies of racism and misogyny underlying the violence. Falcâon's decolonial feminist…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"In 2003, Perâu's Comisiâon de la Verdad y Reconciliaciâon (CVR) issued its groundbreaking final report on the human rights abuses perpetuated by two revolutionary groups and the country's armed forces and police from 1980 to 2000. Sylvanna M. Falcâon examines how local communities in Lima have formed oppositional spaces, movements, and communities to challenge a status quo that erases Perâu's history of internal violence. These counterpublics focus on human rights-oriented memory that acknowledges the legacies of racism and misogyny underlying the violence. Falcâon's decolonial feminist analysis challenges the rise of authoritarianism in democratic societies while exploring the limits of liberalism to counteract it. As she shows, projects shaped by counterpublic memory best equip Perâuvians to enact real, liberatory, and transformative justice for human rights violations both past and present. Engaging and intimate, Human Rights Counterpublics in Perâu illuminates the power of the human rights and memory work"--
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Autorenporträt
Sylvanna M. Falcón is a professor in Latin American and Latino/a Studies at the University of California Santa Cruz. She is the author of Power Interrupted: Antiracist and Feminist Activism inside the United Nations and coeditor of Precarity and Belonging: Labor, Migration, and Noncitizenship.