Member Profile

Diana Ojeda

Associate Professor, Cider, Universidad de los Andes,

Contributor, Platypus, The CASTAC Blog

About Diana

Diana Ojeda is a feminist geographer who combines political ecology, feminist geopolitics and STS in the study of dynamics of dispossession in the Colombian Caribbean.

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Contributions to Platypus, The CASTAC Blog

View all of Diana's posts on Platypus, The CASTAC Blog.

The militarization of life under war, “post-conflict,” and the COVID-19 crisis

Like many others in Colombia, Nairys is a campesina for whom the experience of confinement has been one of dramatic disruption. Marked by restricted mobility, which means very difficult access to water and subsistence crops, being locked down also implies the reduced possibility to buy medicine, food, and other basic supplies. As for many other women, stay-at-home ordinances have also meant more care work, as the responsibilities of feeding and tending for her relatives fall heavily on her. Likewise, confinement involves being permanently under the same roof with her partner, which has exposed Nayris to more possibilities of being mistreated and abused by him, particularly as pressures over mere subsistence increase. (more…) (read more...)