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Borderization is gendered
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This chapter analyzes Bolivian women’s relations with the Chilean state through its agencies and local officials. Three thematic axes delimit its main discussions: (1) the processes of migratory documentary regularization; (2) access to public health; and (3) access to housing. The main objective of the chapter is to show how borderization processes led by the Bolivian and Chilean states have a particular impact on the women due to the intersectionality of their migratory, gender, and ethnic status. The ethnographic findings reveal an intimate relationship between the violations operated by the Chilean state by denying basic rights to these women, and their mobilities and the development of female agency. Furthermore, these data show that transborder displacements are strategies performed by women to solve everyday family problems.

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The elementary structuring of patriarchy

Bolivian women and transborder mobilities in the Andes

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