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Reviewed by:
  • Género, migraciones y derechos humanos ed. by Cortés Almudena, Manjarrez Josefina
  • Maider Moreno García
Cortés Almudena, Manjarrez Josefina (eds.), 2018, Género, migraciones y derechos humanos [Gender, migration, and human rights], Barcelona, Bellaterra, 320 pages.

This book should be of considerable interest to specialists in the three disciplines mentioned in the title. Its 10 chapters are unified by the concept of gender, here used to analyse intersections between capitalist neoliberalism and migration movements.

The first part presents analytic tools for conceiving of borders as places that produce identity, otherness, and difference. Borders constitute privileged enclaves for manufacturing attributions of what is 'other', particularly on the basis of sexual difference. The first two chapters, written by the editors, use the key concept of 'mobility regime', together with sexual order, to study overall mobility processes. The authors identify the components of different regimes involving and combining distinct scales of governance and analytical axes, primarily the following: (a) the tie linking neoliberalism to migration and to the diversification and so-called 'feminization' of migration flows; (b) descriptions of a number of actors (the nation state proves a decisive one); (c) the relationship between mobility and immobility (particularly as it concerns migration stations in Mexico and internment centres in Europe), including the essential role of the danger and fear of being deported; (d) territorial delimitation processes.

Mexico's northern and southern borders offer a paradigm for studying how sexual and gender violence are entwined. Violent acts of these types link the patriarchal order with a certain mobility regime. Through painstaking ethnographic study, Almudena Cortés and Josefina Manjarrez describe in Chapters 1 and 2 the conditions of Central American female migrants caught in a trajectory marked by these different types of violence. Women who violate the patriarchal mandate, daring to leave the domestic sphere to which they have historically been assigned, discover a daily reality in which their bodies become available to all men. In this sense, the border as a place where sexual differences are constructed represents a call to order, a principle of the patriarchal and neoliberal system in which female migrants are perceived as sexual objects, identical, interchangeable, there for reproductive or sentimental purposes.

Moreover, the mobility regime in that region is the target of a metanarrative of criminality that conceals the sexual violence to which women, children and adolescents of both sexes, LGBT people, indigenous people, and descendants of Africans are systematically subjected. Women are victims of sexual violence in all three major migration places and stages: the region they leave from, their migration trajectory, and their arrival at their final destination.

In this context, it is urgent to develop public policies that take aim to fight these inequalities and that restate women's rights. Chapters 3 and 4, by Virginia Maquieira and María Castro, follow out this line of analysis, stressing the rights of female migrants and focusing on international cooperation actors. Maquieira presents the milestones in the history of women's rights and international law, discussing the tensions between security and freedom, highlighting the [End Page 352] urgency of redefining the security doctrine on the basis of human rights and redistribution of the world's wealth. Castro ends this first section with a discussion of international cooperation on development and humanitarian action in a context of violence that forces massive numbers of people to migrate—unprecedented since World War II—and offering an interesting presentation of the various actors and current global agendas (2030 Agenda, Agenda for Humanity).

The second part of the work covers the situation of migrants who leave Mexico or the Northern Triangle of Central America for the United States. Cristina Cru describes current Mexican migration, specifically by residents of the city of Puebla. Her analysis, centred on the difference between the sexes, apprehends the migration phenomenon in all its complexity. Whereas Puebla inhabitants associate migration with positive adjectives for men ('courage', 'success', 'masculinity'), women who decide to migrate are perceived as 'libertine and disobedient', even when they leave to reunite with their families. Though this perception is evolving, it has had a strong impact on women's migration. It provides a number of benefits for...

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