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A01=Claudia Chavez Arguelles
Acteal
Anthropology
Author_Claudia Chavez Arguelles
Category=JHMC
Category=JPVH
Chiapas
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
human rights
Indigenous Studies
judicial cleansing
judicial systems
justice
Las Abejas
Latin American Studies
legal anthropology
Libro Blanco Sobre Acteal
Mexico
re-existence
state impunity
Tsotsil Maya
Zapatista Army
Zapatista Revolution

Product details

  • ISBN 9781477335031
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Dec 2026
  • Publisher: University of Texas Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How the Mexican state secured impunity after the 1997 Acteal Massacre in Chiapas, and how Maya survivors reimagine justice through embodied, collective practices of memory, healing, and political autonomy.

In December 1997, forty-five Tsotsil Maya, most of them women and children, were killed in a state-backed paramilitary attack in Acteal, Chiapas––one of the starkest cases of state violence in contemporary Mexico. Yet, as Claudia Chávez Argüelles shows, the counterinsurgent violence unleashed at Acteal did not end with the massacre, but continued in its aftermath as state impunity became a form of governance. Drawing on legal archives and long-term collaborative ethnographic research with survivors and their organization, Las Abejas, Chávez maps the social life of their testimonies across judicial rulings, media narratives, and academic interventions. Her analysis reveals how the state forged a racializing legal truth that discredits Indigenous survivors' ways of knowing, masks the slaughter's feminicidal dimensions, and shields state officials from accountability. Against this logic of erasure, the book traces how Las Abejas has cultivated "the Other Justice," a horizon of re-existence rooted in embodied, collective practices of memory, healing, and autonomy. Exposing the human toll of impunity and the decolonizing force of Las Abejas' struggle, The Other Justice redefines what justice can mean beyond the confines of law.

Claudia Chávez Argüelles is a Mexican lawyer and an assistant professor of anthropology at Tulane University. She is a coeditor of Fugitive Anthropology: Embodying Activist Research.

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