Longterm Accompaniment: Indigenous Entrepreneurs
Organization | Highland Support Project |
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Region | United States |
Website | Website |
ProjectLeader | BENJAMIN EDWARD BLEVINS |
Linked Problems & Solutions
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Indigenous Guatemalan women face layers of oppression as women in a patriarchal society, a discriminated-against Indigenous minority in a colonized country, and as Indigenous people, they are three times more likely to be living in extreme poverty. Join us in implementing long-term accompaniment through micro-investing & providing jobs and job training, peer-to-peer counseling and health services, and the tools & guidance needed to gain the resilience and self-determination they need to thrive.
Challenge
COVID-19 is a threat multiplier of existing social and economic inequalities throughout Latin America, exceptionally so among Indigenous populations. Indigenous women specifically, who have minimal job opportunities and a disproportionately large responsibility of demands at home, are also battling rising domestic and gender-based violence rates.
Long-Term Impact
Indigenous Guatemalan women face multigenerational historical trauma, rooted in their status in a colonized state and the genocide from Guatemalan civil war from 1960 to 1996. The extensiveness of their trauma means that recovery is long-term, and through the last 25 years, HSP has shown we are committed to impactful change from the ground up. These projects are changing lives, and the ripple effect will continue to transform the quality of life for generations to come.
References
- https://highlandsupportproject.org/
- http://highlandsupportproject.org
- http://highlandsupportproject.org/stove-building
- https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/sg_policy_brief_covid_lac.pdf
- https://www.forbes.com/sites/unicefusa/2021/12/29/unicef-inside-look-covid-19-and-child-protection-in-guatemala/?sh=31ead4644290
Additional Documentation
https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/sg_policy_brief_covid_lac.pdf
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