Maya women and domestic violence in Quiché, Guatemala: access and operation of justice between charges of impunity and pleas of “minimum criminal law”
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Date
2023-10-10Author
Maresca, Eleonora
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Mayan women and domestic violence: does impunity is really the problem?
To answer to the main question, it is important to dwell on the relationship between the
criminal justice system and those women.
In particular, over the early stages of the judicial path, the main issues concern the
perception of domestic violence as an injurious experience and the expectations of the Quiché
women related to the criminal justice system. These are two dimensions which may explain
why very few Quiché women are interested to accomplish the criminal ruling in case of
domestic violence perpetrated by their partner. Certainly, the connection to any NGO is the
discriminant to acquire the necessary awareness and courage to denounce. However, it might
not be enough.
According to the Guatemalan institutions, the quiché women are used to denounce their
partner (for scaring him) and then, to “step back” (once they realize he might be
incarcerated). Yet, religious faith and the economic dependence might not be the only
explanations of this phenomenon. As Hesse intimates, the institutional racism arises from the
daily performance of the administrative system, in the frame of values enforced as universals.
For this reason, the Bourdieu’s concept of symbolic violence might be entangled with the
everyday racism, described by Essed.
Consequently, some barriers to criminal justice are just invisible because they concern
the habitus shaped by the overlapping of cultures, both for women and institutions, Indeed,
the narratives of the individuals are intertwined with the collective one. From the Maya
perspective, history is indispensable to understand the origin of the issue, as well as, emotions
and relationships play a crucial role to find solutions. Looking at the accusatorial system by
the point of view of the quiché women, it might help us to (re)discover a new inspiration to
think about criminal justice and human rights.