THE REPRODUCTION OF THE COLONIALITY OF FEMALE BODIES IN THE JUSTICE SYSTEM AS A CHALLENGE TO ETHICS
Abstract
The article starts from the premise that the woman's body must be considered a political territory. Territory dominated by colonial processes that deprive women of sovereignty over their own bodies. Based on Emmanuel Lévinas, it reinforces the importance of ethical consideration about the otherness of women. And based on Pierre Bourdieu, he highlights the processes of reproduction of androcentric domination that exist in society and that deny the autonomy of female alterity. Among the different processes of practical or symbolic reproduction of the oppression and domination of female bodies, the article analyzes situations that occurred within the scope of the Justice System. The analyzes show how certain institutional practices reinforce and reproduce stereotypes about women and maintain the coloniality of their bodies. Therefore, it proposes ethical resistance as the basis for political struggles that break the paradigm of androcentric domination.