Human rights and the sexual and reproductive health of migrant indigenous women
Abstract
This article presents a study of the living conditions of indigenous women who have migrated from the country to the city. It analyzed their access to rights and sexual and reproductive health. It emphasizes statements by the women that indicate discriminatory relations, racism, and inequality in their daily lives. The fact that they do not exercise their citizenship rights places them in a position of social exclusion, in terms of access to justice, on a local and global level. The change in their realities has meaning and significance which, despite social and gender inequality, are manifest in an intersubjective way as a better life in the places where they have come to live. The paper concludes by proposing a dialog of knowledge to allow a humanist construction of the understanding of a decent life.
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