Engaging territorio cuerpo-tierra through body and community mapping: a methodology for making communities safer |
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Authors: | Elizabeth L. Sweet Sara Ortiz Escalante |
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Affiliation: | 1. Geography and Urban Studies, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA;2. School of Community and Regional Planning, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada;3. Col·lectiu Punt 6, Barcelona, Spain |
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Abstract: | We propose a new way of collectively creating data about gender violence through active participation and mapping women’s bodies and communities. We see this process of data creation, self-awareness and action as inherently linked to the native concept territorio cuerpo-tierra, the landscape of bodies-lands. The concept erases Western notions separating bodies and land and helps to decenter the public–private divide, which is an important obstacle to eliminating violence against women. Drawing on data from our work with Mexican women in the, U.S. and Mexico, we illuminate the continuity of women’s individual bodily experience of violence and collective spatial knowledge of community safety. We conclude that the process and outcomes of body and community mapping linking bodies and land, afford planners the prospect of engaging as partners and co-actants with community members in the goal of making places safe for women. |
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Keywords: | Violence against women Mexicana body mapping community mapping public–private divide territorio cuerpo-tierra |
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