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State Feminism and Women's Movements: The Impact of Chile's Servicio Nacional de la Mujer on Women's Activism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2022
Abstract
Much of the literature on Latin American women's movements finds that movements have grown weaker since transitions to democracy in part because of the institutionalization of gender policy within states. This article advances an alternative argument drawing on evidence from the Chilean case. Using a historical institutionalist approach and the framework of state feminism, I outline the way Chile's Servicio Nacional de la Mujer (SERNAM) has altered the institutional context in which women's movements act. I show that SERNAM has affected both the shape of the movement (most notably the power relations among its various segments) and the strategies that different segments employ to pursue their interests. I argue that instead of weakening the women's movement, SERNAM actually provides the movement with important resources, most notably a discourse of women's equality and a set of objectives around which to mobilize. There is evidence that Chilean women's organizations are responding to this new institutional context by linking up previously dispersed groups, using SERNAM's own discourse to pressure the state to fulfill its commitments to women and, most importantly, to ensure that, in addition to gender, class and ethnicity are also addressed as sources of women's marginalization.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright 2003 by the University of Texas Press
Footnotes
I would like to thank Laura Macdonald, Patricia Richards, Jill Vickers, Antonio Franceschet, and the anonymous LARR reviewers for their very helpful comments on earlier versions of this article. The research was supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and the Canadian International Development Research Centre. I would also like to acknowledge my debt to the women who agreed to be interviewed in the course of my research in Chile, while absolving them for any errors that I may have made in interpretation.
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