Analysis of the technopolitical and connectivity processes for feminist activism on Facebook for “Ni Una Menos Bolivia”

This article will demonstrate the connectivity and technopolitical process that built the “Ni Una Menos Bolivia” movement on Facebook beginning in 2016, the year in which this collective was constituted with the express goal to help organize feminist activism responding to femicide and violence agai...

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Autor principal: Morón Terrazas, Stephanie Scarlen
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Facultad de Humanidades y Artes. UNR 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://zonafranca.unr.edu.ar/index.php/ZonaFranca/article/view/184
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Sumario:This article will demonstrate the connectivity and technopolitical process that built the “Ni Una Menos Bolivia” movement on Facebook beginning in 2016, the year in which this collective was constituted with the express goal to help organize feminist activism responding to femicide and violence against women in the country. These two perspectives will be explored together due to the notion that a techno political process goes hand in hand with the culture of connectivity (Van Dijck, 2013). The fundamental importance of relating the experience of the technopolitical process and of the connectivity that built this movement in Bolivia is vital to further understand the roles that other feminist movements in Latin America exert in order to bring thousands of women together in response to the problem of gender-based violence.