Blackness & Land Rights in Brazil Articles


“Fraudulent” Identities: The Politics of Defining Quilombo Descendants in Brazil

This article analyzes the role of historians and anthropologists in the conceptualization of “quilombo,” past and present, in Brazil. The validity of the new political identity, remanescente de quilombo (quilombo descendant), has been contested by the popular media as a “fraudulent” identity used by black communities to obtain land rights. While the term quilombo was used by the Portuguese Crown to refer to three or more fugitive slaves in hiding, quilombo descendants have been defined beyond the limits of simply the ancestors of fugitive slaves. I argue that when it comes to quilombo descendants obtaining actual rights they are often dismissed as frauds until proven authentic. Their authenticity depends not only on their ability to perform and describe the ancestral history of their community, but more importantly, in their ability to tell a specific history of their past as it has been written and incorporated into the Brazilian national imaginary.


Quilombolismo: Fighting and Dying for Rights

Do Nascimento stood before his colleagues and called Brazilian abolition as “cruel a crime” as slavery; in doing so, he challenged a room of activists, community leaders, and intellectuals to focus on action over theory, social practice over political rhetoric. In this article, I illustrate how the Brazilian government is tribalizing its black communities by recycling an outdated story of what it meant to be black in colonial Brazil as a means for distributing rights. Supported by the right to self-identify, black Brazilians have been given the opportunity to identify as the descendants of fugitive slaves. While this right comes with several social benefits, it also comes at a social cost. The transformation of the once historical “quilombo” into a new political category has led to new stereotypes, misunderstandings, and violent land conflicts in Brazil.

Undocumented Health Access & Gender Articles


Living Barriers and the Emotional Labor of Accessing Care from the Margins

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed the deeply entrenched inequalities and barriers in the U.S. healthcare system. Past research would suggest that extant barriers to care for undocumented immigrant communities, such as those pertaining to citizenship status, class, race, language fluency, and employment status as well as increased demands for documentation, fear of deportation, and general mistrust in the public healthcare system (Heyman, Nuñez, and Talavera 2009; Flores 2015; Hacker et al. 2015), would be amplified within the pandemic climate, making access to care even more difficult. Building from my research on undocumented motherhood and health access, I explore the emotional labor performed by undocumented communities in navigating multiple barriers to accessing public health services as a way to think more deeply about the struggles these communities may be facing during the current COVID-19 pandemic, but also as a way to imagine what kind of work might be required fundamentally to remove barriers to health and improve long-term access to care for the most vulnerable communities.


Undocumented Motherhood: Gender, Maternal Identity, and the Politics of Health Care

Abstract

Undocumented Mexican immigrants have had to regularly confront a prohibiting health care system despite alienation, marginalization, and the threat of deportation. In this article, I explore the impact of political exclusion and alienating discourses on the health habitus of undocumented Mexican mothers through the narrative of one mother, Marta Garza, who finds herself at the painful intersection of political and medical alienation. Marta’s narrative reflects an analytical framework that centers undocumented motherhood as a space of necessary resilience and strain, wherein she is forced to advocate for her children’s health despite prohibitive barriers and dangerous potential consequences.


The Politics of Resilience and Resistance: Health care Access and Undocumented Mexican Motherhood in the United States

Abstract

This article explores the effect of an undocumented status in shaping narratives of resilience, emotional expression and maternal sentiment among undocumented Mexican mothers in the United States. Given the dominant narrative of maternal responsibility that I encountered while conducting ethnographic research among undocumented women in Houston, this work focuses on the cultural construction and narrative use of maternal sentiment as it is expressed in relation to the health practices and overall forms of survival and resilience of undocumented Mexican mothers and their children.