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Ni una menos (Spanish: [ni ˈuna ˈmenos]; Spanish for "Not one [woman] less") is a Latin American fourth-wave [1] [2] grassroots [3] feminist movement, which started in Argentina and has spread across several Latin American countries, that campaigns against gender-based violence. This mass mobilization comes as a response to various systemic ...
Florencia Abbate (born December 24, 1976, in Buenos Aires) is an Argentine writer, poet and journalist. She is one of the founders of the feminist collective Ni una menos . She studied literature at the Universidad de Buenos Aires and has worked for different media, such as "La Nación", "Perfil", "Página 12" or "El país" among others.
Nicole Becker. Nicole " Nicki " Becker (Buenos Aires) [1] is a climate activist from Argentina and one of the founders of Jóvenes por el Clima, part of the Fridays for Future movement. [2] Becker became the youth champion for Escazu Agreement and Sanitation and Water for All (SWA) in 2021.
Pañuelazo for the right to legal, safe and free abortion in Santa Fe, 2018. The scarf gradually became more popular, being used in particular during the Ni una menos marches [9] [10] [5] and achieving notoriety in the public space since 2017, after the #MeToo movement, with the march "A global cry for legal abortion" that took place on 28 September of that year, having wide coverage by the ...
Lemos, 42, is a seasonal worker from northern Argentina. Six months a year, she harvests yerba, the leaves of a native South American shrub that are the basis of Argentina’s national beverage, mate.
Ni una menos (meaning "Not One Less") is a Latin American feminist movement originating in Argentina which aims to end violence against women. The movement has engaged in women's strikes, including the International Women's Strike. [66] [78] Ni una menos has been described as fourth wave feminism.
Green bandana (Argentina, 2021) Green bandanas and signs at a march to legalize abortion (Mexico City, 2019) Green bandanas were first adopted as a symbol by Argentinian abortion and family planning rights activists in 2003, drawing inspiration from the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo protesters who similarly used white scarves (opponents of abortion rights in Argentina in turn began using blue ...
Gabriela Cabezón Cámara was born on 4 November 1968 in San Isidro, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. She studied Humanities at the University of Buenos Aires. [22] One of her first stories, La hermana Cleopatra (the first draft of what would become her first novel, La Virgen Cabeza), appeared in 2006 in the anthology Una terraza propia, from publishing company Norma. [23]