Pobreza, migración y desempleo: mujeres en la sierra tepehua de Hidalgo, México

Authors

  • Pablo Vargas González Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico

Keywords:

Globalization in rural environments, Rural poverty, Migration, Rural women, Community organization

Abstract

For decades, the State of Hidalgo has been considered as an entity with deep social inequalities and scant social, economic and political development. As a result, there are conditions of exclusion, marginalization, racial discrimination and unequal access to the fundamental rights of its citizens; which are still present in the population census data published by Inegi 2000 and 2005.
In the State of Hidalgo there are more than 4596 localities, of which 96% are less than 2500 inhabitants; the great majority of them are located in marginal «municipios» and regions and therefore they do not have the minimum indispensable conditions of welfare. But it is not only poverty but exclusion and vulnerability which affect these communities.
In the sierra of Tepehua (San Bartolo Tutotepec, Huehuetla y Tenango), the rural communities, mostly indigenous, with agricultural economic vocation live in marginal conditions and the middlemanism —coyotaje— is a persistent flagellum that occurs even in public organisms. However, the rural inhabitants generate response processes to globalization through social capital and the women organisation.

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Published

2009-04-23

How to Cite

Vargas González, P. (2009). Pobreza, migración y desempleo: mujeres en la sierra tepehua de Hidalgo, México. Espacio Y Desarrollo, (21), 21–34. Retrieved from https://revistas.pucp.edu.pe/index.php/espacioydesarrollo/article/view/5689

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Articles