13 TESES SOBRE O PROTESTO FEMINISTA - UM MANIFESTO
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.9771/rf.14.1.72297Palavras-chave:
protesto, feminismos, mobilização social, teoria feminista, movimentos sociaisResumo
Protestos feministas antirracistas e anticapitalistas estão na vanguarda das mobilizações de massa contemporâneas nas Américas e em outras regiões do mundo. Como um coletivo de intelectuais-ativistas feministas que vivem em diversos países da América Latina, no Canadá e em diferentes regiões dos Estados Unidos, temos nos envolvido nos protestos e teorizado sobre eles desde as revoltas globais da década de 2010. O protesto feminista é uma força constante que desafia a intensificação das violências racistas e de gênero, as novas formas de despossessão e extrativismo capitalista, e a ascensão das extremas direitas. Embora nosso foco esteja na América Latina, acreditamos que estas experiências elucidam também as respostas locais aos ataques violentos contra mulheres, povos indígenas e grupos racializados, assim como contra seus territórios e suas vidas, que vêm ocorrendo em todo o mundo.
Este manifesto teoriza como e porquê os feminismos têm sido uma força crescente nos protestos, marcando uma mudança de época no ativismo. Apresentamos treze teses sobre protesto feminista que iluminam o momento atual, conceituam o trabalho e os aportes que o protesto feminista faz e tem feito e propõe teorias e métodos para estudos futuros. Nosso manifesto emerge de conversas em curso e de insights produzidos coletivamente a partir de nossas pesquisas individuais e de uma vasta gama de fontes secundárias e abordagens teóricas. Os manifestos são um gênero utópico cujo objetivo é provocar esperança e criar desejo por um futuro diferente. Como em qualquer manifesto, estão aqui interligadas análise, provocação, aspiração e inspiração. Nosso objetivo é encorajar reflexão e ação que ampliem o poder e a promessa do protesto feminista.
Downloads
Referências
Agência Patricia Galvão. n.d. “Dossiê Violência contra as Mulheres: Violência e
Racismo” [Report on violence against women: Violence and racism]. https://
dossies.agenciapatriciagalvao.org.br/violencia/violencias/violencia-e-racismo/.
Ahmed, Sara. 2017. Living a Feminist Life. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Alabao, Nuria. 2022. “Por uma democracia feminsta (sempre em construção)” [For
a feminist democracy (always in construction)]. Nueva Sociedad (October).
https://nuso.org/articulo/EP22-democracia-feminista-construcao/.
Alvarez, Sonia E. 1999. “Advocating Feminism: The Latin American Feminist
NGO ‘Boom.’” International Feminist Journal of Politics 1(2):181–209.
———. 2009. “Beyond NGO-ization? Reflections from Latin America.” Development
(2):175–84.
———. 2019. “Feminismo en Movimiento: Feminismo en Protesto.” Revista
Punto Género 11:73–102.
———. 2021. “Afterword—Embodying Democracy: Protest and Politics in the
Southern Cone.” In Sutton and Vacarezza (2021), 246–51.
———. 2022. “Protesto: Provocações Teóricas desde os Feminismos” [Protest:
Feminist theoretical provocations]. Pólis: Revista Latinoamericana 61:98–117.
Alvarez, Sonia E., Claudia de Lima Costa, Verónica Feliu, Rebecca Hester, Norma
Klahn, andMillieThayer, eds. 2014. Translocalities/Translocalidades: Feminist Politics
of Translation in the Latin/a Américas. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Baden, Sally, and Anne Marie Goetz. 1997. “Who Needs [Sex] When You Can
Have [Gender]? Conflicting Discourses on Gender at Beijing.” In Women, International
Development, and Politics: The Bureaucratic Mire, edited by Kathleen Staudt, 37–58. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Balaguera, Martha. 2019. “Citizenship in Transit: Perils and Promises of Crossing
Mexico.” PhD dissertation, University of Massachusetts Amherst.
———. 2020. “‘Would You Come with Me to the Line?’ Lawfare and Legal Accompaniment
at the US‐Mexico Border.” Association for Political and Legal Anthropology,
September 15. https://politicalandlegalanthro.org/2020/09/15
/would-you-come-with-me-to-the-line-lawfare-and-legal-accompaniment-at
-the-us-mexico-border/.
———. 2023. “Frontier Caravans: Protest Performativity and the Making of Transnational
Political Subjects.” Paper delivered at the University of British Columbia,
Okanagan Campus, February 17.
Bercu, Chiara, Heidi Moseson, Julia McReynolds-Pérez, Emily Wilkinson Salamea,
Belén Grosso, María Trpin, Ruth Zurbriggen, et al. 2022. “In-Person Later
Abortion Accompaniment: A Feminist Collective-Facilitated Self-Care Practice
in Latin America.” Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters 29(3):121–43.
Bernal, Angélica María. 2017. Beyond Origins: Rethinking Founding in a Time of
Constitutional Democracy. New York: Oxford University Press.
———. 2021. “Ecuador’s Dual Populisms: Neocolonial Extractivism, Violence, and
Indigenous Resistance.” Thesis Eleven 164(1):9–36.
Bersani, Leo. 1996. Homos. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Bey, Marquis. 2022. Black Trans Feminism. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Bhattacharya, Tithi, ed. 2017. Social Reproduction Theory: Remapping Class, Recentering
Oppression. London: Pluto.
Blofield,Merike, Christina Ewig, and JenniferM. Piscopo. 2017. “The Reactive Left:
Gender Equality and the Latin American Pink Tide.” Social Politics 24:345–69.
Brito, Priscilla Caroline de Sousa. 2017. ‘‘Primavera de mulheres’: Internet e dinâmicas
de protesto nas manifestações feministas no Rio de Janeiro em 2015”
[Women’s spring: Internet and dynamics of protest in feminist manifestations
in Rio de Janeiro in 2015]. Master’s thesis, sociology, Federal University of
Rio de Janeiro.
Buarque de Hollanda, Heloisa. 2018. Explosão feminista: Arte, cultura, política e
universidade [Feminist explosion: Art, culture, politics, and university]. Rio de
Janeiro: Companhia das Letras.
Burton, Julia, and Guillermina Trinidad Peralta. 2021. “Un aborto feminista es un
aborto cuidado: Prácticas de cuidado en el socorrismo patagónico” [A feminist
abortion is a careful abortion: Care practices in Patagonian feminist abortion solidarity].
Revista Estudos Feministas [Feminist studies journal] 29(2):1–13.
Butler, Judith. 2015. Notes toward a Performative Theory of Assembly. Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press.
Cabnal, Lorena. 2017. “Tzk´at: Red de sanadoras ancestrales del feminismo
comunitario desde Iximulew-Guatemala” [Tzk´at: Network of acenstral community
feminist healers from Iximulew-Guatemala]. Ecología política (Political
ecology) 54:98–102.
Cadena, Marisol de la. 2015. Earth Beings: Ecologies of Practice across Andean
Worlds. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Cadena, Marisol de la, and Mario Blaser, eds. 2018. A World of Many Worlds. Durham,
NC: Duke University Press.
Califia, Patrick. 1994. Public Sex: The Culture of Radical Sex. Pittsburgh: Cleis.
Carneiro, Sueli. 2016. “Women in Movement.” Translated by Regina Camargo.
Meridians 14(1):30–49.
Castillo,Carmen. 2022. “De la derrota surgen derroteros” [From defeat, paths emerge].
Le Monde Diplomatique, December. https://www.lemondediplomatique.cl/2022
/12/de-la-derrota-surgen-derroteros.html.
Cavallero, Lucía. 2020. “Labor, Debt, and Reproduction: The Feminist Strike as a
Revolution of Everyday Life.” New Global Studies 14(2):133–39.
Cavallero, Lucía, and Verónica Gago. 2021. A Feminist Reading of Debt. Translated
by Liz Mason-Deese. London: Pluto.
Contreras, María José. 2021. “Poniendo los cuerpos en la lucha contra la violencia
basada en el género: El tsunami feminista en Chile el 2018” [Putting our bodies
on the line in the battle against gender-based violence: The feminist tsunami in
Chile in 2018]. Taller de letras [Letter shop] 68:162–80.
Conway, J. M., Osterweil, M. y Thorburn, E. (2018). Theorizing Power, Difference and the Politics of Social Change: Problems and Possibilities in Assemblage Thinking. En Studies in Social Justice, 12(1), 1-18.
Coryat, Diana. 2019. “Social Movements and Media Cultures in Defense of Life
and Territory.” In Media Cultures in Latin America: Key Concepts and New Debates,
edited by Anna Cristina Pertierra and Juan Francisco Salazar, 160–80. New
York: Routledge.
Costa, Claudia de Lima. 2020. “Latin America, Decoloniality, and Translation: FeministsBuildingConnectantEpistemologies.” InTheories of the Flesh: Latinx and Latin
American Feminisms, Transformation, and Resistance, edited by Andrea J. Pitts,
Mariana Ortega, and José Medina, 171–87. New York: Oxford University Press.
Cristaldo, Heloisa. 2022. “Report: BrazilHas HighestNumber of Trans People Killed
in 2022.” AgênciaBrasil, January 27. https://agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br/en
/direitos-humanos/noticia/2023-01/report-brazil-has-highest-number-trans
-people-killed-2022.
Curiel, Ochy. 2021. “Berta Cáceres and Decolonial Feminism.” Translated by Bruna
Barros and Jess Oliveira. Women’s Studies Quarterly 49 (Fall/Winter): 64–81.
de Fina Gonzalez, Débora. 2022. “Ensamblajes activistas: Feminismos y revuelta social
en Chile” [Feminist assemblages: Feminisms and social revolt in Chile]. Pólis
(1). https://doi.org/10.15332/25006681.6495.
De Fina Gonzalez, Débora, and Francisca Figueroa Vidal. 2019. “Nuevos ‘Campos
de Acción Política’ Feminista: Una mirada a las recientes movilizaciones en
Chile” [New feminist “fields of action”: A look at the recent mobilizations in
Chile]. Revista punto género (Gender point of view review) 11:51–72.
De Fina Gonzalez, Débora (2022). Ensamblajes activistas: Feminismos y Revuelta social en Chile. Campos En Ciencias Sociales, 10(1).
Delany, Samuel R. 1999. Times Square Red, Times Square Blue. New York: New
York University Press.
di Marco, Graciela. 2017. “Social Movement Demands in Argentina and the Constitution
of a ‘Feminist People.’” In Beyond Civil Society: Activism, Participation,
and Protest in Latin America, edited by Sonia E. Alvarez, Jeffrey W. Rubin,
Millie Thayer, Gianpaolo Baiocchi, and Agustín Laó-Montes, 122–40. Durham,
NC: Duke University Press.
Eschle, Catherine. 2005. “‘Skeleton Women’: Feminism and the Antiglobalization
Movement.” Signs 30(3):1741–60.
———. 2018. “Troubling Stories of the End of Occupy: Feminist Narratives of Betrayal
at Occupy Glasgow.” Social Movement Studies 17(5):524–40.
Eschle, Catherine, and Alison Bartlett, eds. 2023. Feminism and Protest Camps: Entanglements,
Critiques, and Re-Imaginings. Bristol: Bristol University Press.
Escobar, Arturo. 2008. Territories of Difference: Place, Movements, Life, Redes. Durham,
NC: Duke University Press.
———. 2015. “Territorios de diferencia: La ontología política de los ‘derechos al
territorio’” [Territories of difference:The political ontology of “rights to territory”].
Cuadernos de antropología social (Journal of social anthropology) 41:25–38.
———. 2020. Pluriversal Politics: The Real and the Possible. Translated by David
Frye. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Federici, Silvia. 2020. “Silvia Federici: The Joyful Militancy of Feminism.” Interview
by Julius Gavroche. Autonomies, March 1. https://autonomies.org/2020/03
/silvia-federici-the-joyful-militancy-of-feminism/.
Fernández Anderson, Cora. 2020. “Activists Keep Argentina’s Abortion Reform on
the Agenda Despite Covid-19.” NACLA Newsletter, July 9. https://nacla.org
/news/2020/07/08/argentina-abortion-reform-covid.
Follegati Montenegro, Luna. 2018. “El feminismo se ha vuelto una necesidad:
Movimiento estudiantil y organización feminista (2000–2017)” [Feminism has
become a necessity: The student movement and feminist organization (2000–
]. Revista anales [Annual review] 14(7):261–91.
Fregoso, Rosa-Linda. 2023. The Force of Witness: Contra Feminicide. Durham, NC:
Duke University Press.
Fried, Marlene Gerber. 2013. “Reproductive Rights Activism in the Post-Roe Era.”
American Journal of Public Health 103(1):10–14.
Friedman, Elisabeth Jay. 2016. Interpreting the Internet: Feminist and Queer
Counterpublics in Latin America. Oakland: University of California Press.
———, ed. 2019. Seeking Rights from the Left: Gender, Sexuality, and the Latin
American Pink Tide. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Friedman, Elisabeth Jay, and Constanza Tabbush. 2016. “#NiUnaMenos: Not One
Less, Not One More Death!” NACLA Report on the Americas, November 1.
https://nacla.org/news/2016/11/01/niunamenos-not-one-woman-less-not
-one-more-death.
Fuentes, Marcela A. 2019. Performance Constellations: Networks of Protest and Activism
in Latin America. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Fulda, Isabel. 2021. “The Green Tide: Abortion Protests and Struggles for Reproductive
Justice in Latin America.” Paper presented at Colectiva Protesta, University of
Massachusetts Amherst, March 10. https://polsci.umass.edu/event/colectiva
-protesta-presents-green-tide-abortion-protests-and-struggles-reproductive-justice.
Gago, Verónica. 2020. Feminist International: How to Change Everything. Translated
by Liz Mason-Deese. London: Verso.
y Alvarez et al.
Garza, Alicia. 2014. “A Herstory of the Black Lives Movement.” Feminist Wire, October
https://thefeministwire.com/2014/10/blacklivesmatter-2/.
Goes, Juliana M. 2023. “Decolonizing Black Cities: Black Movements and Territories
of Life in Brazil.” PhD dissertation, University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Gomes, Carla, and Bila Sorj. 2014. “Corpo, geração e identidade: A Marcha das
vadias no Brasil” [Body, generation, and identity: SlutWalk in Brazil]. Revista
Sociedade e Estado 29(9):433–47.
Gómez-Barris, Macarena. 2017. The Extractive Zone: Social Ecologies and Decolonial
Perspectives. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Gonzalez, Lélia. 1988. “A Categoria Político-Cultural de Amefricanidade” [The
political cultural category of Amefricanidade]. Tempo Brasileiro 92/93 (Jan./
Jun.): 69–82.
Gutiérrez, María Alicia. 2021. “Rights and Social Struggle: The Experience of the
National Campaign for the Right to Legal, Safe, and Free Abortion in Argentina.”
In Sutton and Vacarezza 2021, 157–74.
Halberstam, Jack. 2018. “Unbuilding Gender: Trans* Anarchitectures in and beyond
the Work of Gordon Matta-Clark.” Places (October). https://doi.org
/10.22269/181003.
Hale, Charles R., and Leith Mullings. 2020. “A Time to Recalibrate: Analyzing and
Resisting the Americas-Wide Project of Racial Retrenchment.” In Black and Indigenous
Resistance in the Americas: From Multiculturalism to Racist Backlash,
edited by Juliet Hooker, 21–66. Lanham, MD: Lexington.
Hernández Reyes, Castriela Esther. 2019. “Black Women’s Struggles against
Extractivism, Land Dispossession, and Marginalization in Colombia.” Latin
American Perspectives 46(2):217–34.
Hilner, Hillary, Ana López, and Manuela Badilla. 2021. “¿El neoliberalismo nace y
muere en Chile? Reflexiones sobre el 18-O desde perspectivas feministas” [Neoliberalism
was born and died in Chile? Reflections on October 18 from feminist
perspectives]. História unisinos [Unisinos history] 25(2):276–91.
Keefe-Oates, Brianna. 2021. “Transforming Abortion Rights through Access to
Community-Based Health.” In Sutton and Vacarezza 2021, 190–204.
Laó-Montes, Agustín. 2016. “Afro-Latin American Feminisms at the Cutting Edge
of Emerging Political-Epistemic Movements.” Meridians 14(2):1–24.
Márquez-Montaño, Erika. 2020. “Parar para Avanzar: Feminist Activism in 2019
Latin American Mobilizations.” In Persistence Is Resistance: Celebrating 50 Years
of Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, edited by Julie Shayne, 207–17. Seattle:
University of Washington Press.
Martin, Deborah, and Deborah Shaw. 2021. “Chilean and Transnational Performances
of Disobedience: LasTesis and the Phenomenon of Un violador en tu
camino.” Bulletin of Latin American Research 40(5):712–29.
Miranda Leibe, Lucia, and Daniela Cerna Cerva, eds. 2023. Movimiento feminista:
Continuidades y cambios en Chile y México [Feminist movement: Continuities
and changes in Chile and Mexico]. Santiago: FLACSO.
Muñoz, José Esteban. 1996. “Ephemera as Evidence: Introductory Notes to Queer
Acts.” Women and Performance 8(2):5–16.
Naghibi, Nima. 2023. “Revolutionary Iran: Iran’s Feminist Protests in Context.”
Public Affairs Lecture, University of Toronto Mississauga, March 7.
Nueva Sociedad (New society). 2022. “Progresismos latinoamericanos: Un segundo
tiempo” [Latin American progressivisms: A second time]. Nueva Sociedad (May–
June): 299.
Olson, Alix. 2014. “Queer(y)ing Permanent Partnership.” Wagadu 12 (Summer):
–89.
Orozco Mendoza, Elva F. 2025. The Maternal Contract: A Subaltern Response to Extreme Violence in the Americas. Oxfors University Press.
Orozco Mendoza, Elva F. 2017. “Feminicide and the Funeralization of the City:
On Thing Agency and Protest Politics in Ciudad Juárez.” Theory and Event
(2):351–80.
———. 2019. “Mapping the Trail of Violence: The Memorialization of Public
Space as a Counter-Geography of Violence in Ciudad Juárez.” Journal of Latin
American Geography 18(3):132–57.
———. Forthcoming. “The Maternal Contract.” Unpublished manuscript.
Palmeiro, Cecilia. 2018. “The Latin American Green Tide: Desire and Feminist
Transversality.” Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies 27(4):561–64.
Parrilla, Belén. 2020. “¡Nosotras podemos! Performance, cuerpo y espacio público
en el marco de las movilizaciones feministas en Argentina” [We can do it! Performance,
body, and public space in the framework of feminist mobilizations in Argentina].
Conexión [Connection] 13:83–102.
Paschel, Tianna S. 2018. “Rethinking BlackMobilization in Latin America.” In Afro-
Latin American Studies: An Introduction, edited by Alejandro de la Fuente and
George Reid Andrews, 222–63. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Prior, Jason, and Phil Hubbard. 2017. “Time, Space, and the Authorisation of Sex
Premises in London and Sydney.” Urban Studies 54(3):633–48.
Quiceno Toro, Natalia. 2016. Vivir sabroso: Luchas y movimientos afroatrateños, en
Bojayá, Chocó, Colombia [Living deliciously: Afro-Colombian Movements and
Struggles in the Middle Atrato; Bojayá, Chocó, Colombia]. Bogotá: Universidad
del Rosario.
Radford, Jill, and Diana Russell. 1992. Femicide: The Politics of Woman Killing.
New York: Twayne.
Ransby, Barbara. 2018. Making All Black Lives Matter: Reimagining Freedom in the
Twenty-First Century. Oakland: University of California Press.
Riofrancos, Thea. 2020. Resource Radicals: From Petro-Nationalism to Post-
Extractivism in Ecuador. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Schild, Verónica, and Luna Follegati. 2018. “Chilean Students Confront Machismo
on Campus (Interview).” NACLA Report on the Americas 50(4):411–17.
Segato, Rita Laura. 2016. “Patriarchy from Margin to Center: Discipline, Territoriality,
and Cruelty in the Apocalyptic Phase of Capital.” South Atlantic Quarterly
(3):615–24.
———. 2018. Contra-Pedagogias de la Crueldad [Counter-pedagogies of cruelty].
Buenos Aires: Prometeo Libros.
Sempértegui, Andrea. 2021. “Indigenous Women’s Activism, Ecofeminism, and
Extractivism: Partial Connections in the Ecuadorian Amazon.” Politics and Gender
(1):197–224.
Serafini, Paula. 2020. “‘A Rapist in Your Path’: Transnational Feminist Protest and
Why (and How) Performance Matters.” European Journal of Cultural Studies
(2):290–95.
Sitrin,Marina. 2006. Horizontalism: Voices of Popular Power in Argentina. Edinburgh: AK.
Souza, Natália Maria Félix de. 2019. “When the Body Speaks (to) the Political:
Feminist Activism in Latin America and the Quest for Alternative Futures.”
Contexto Internacional 41(1):89–110.
Stites Mor, Jessica, and Maria del Carmen Suescun Pozas, eds. 2018. The Art of Solidarity:
Visual and Performative Politics in Cold War Latin America. Austin:
University of Texas Press.
Sutton, Barbara. 2007. “Poner el Cuerpo: Women’s Embodiment and Political Resistance
in Argentina.” Latin American Politics and Society 49(3):129–62.
———2020. “Intergenerational Encounters in the Struggle for Abortion Rights in
Argentina.” Women’s Studies International Forum 82 (September–October):
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wsif.2020.102392.
Sutton, Barbara, and Elizabeth Borland. 2018. “Queering Abortion Rights: Notes
from Argentina.” Culture, Health, and Sexuality 20(12):1378–93.
——— 2019. “Abortion and Human Rights for Women in Argentina.” Frontiers
(2):27–61.
Sutton, Barbara, and Nayla Luz Vacarezza, eds. 2021. Abortion and Democracy: Contentious
Body Politics in Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay. Abingdon: Routledge.
Tallbear, Kim, and Angela Willey. 2019. “Introduction: Critical Relationality:
Queer, Indigenous, and Multispecies Belonging beyond Settler Sex and Nature.”
Imaginations 10 (1). https://doi.org/10.17742/IMAGE.CR.10.1.1.
Tapía de la Fuente, María Belén. 2022. “Asamblea Nueva Vulva: Prácticas de
producción de lo común durante el Estallido Social chileno [New vulva assembly:
Production practices of the commons during the Chilean social explosion].
Reflexiones (Reflections) 101(1):1–15.
Thayer, Millie. 2010. Making Transnational Feminism: Rural Women, NGO Activists,
and Northern Donors in Brazil. New York: Routledge.
Thomas, Gwynn. 2016. “Promoting Gender Equality: Michelle Bachelet and Formal
and Informal Institutional Change within the Chilean Presidency.” In Gender,
Institutions, and Change in Bachelet’s Chile, edited by Georgina Waylen, 95–
New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Tomlinson, Barbara, and George Lipsitz. 2019. Insubordinate Spaces: Improvisation
and Accompaniment for Social Justice. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Trujillo Barbadillo, Gracia. 2020. “Neither New nor Utopian (and Yet Worthwhile):
Queer and FeministGenealogies, Conflicts, and Contributions inside Spain’s
-M Movement.” In Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Social Movements:
Protest in Turbulent Times, edited by Cristina Flesher Fominaya and Ramon
A. Feenstra, 210–20. London: Routledge.
Vacarezza, Nayla Luz. 2021. “Orange Hands and Green Kerchiefs: Affect and
Democratic Politics in Two Transnational Symbols for Abortion Rights.” In
Sutton and Vacarezza 2021, 70–81.
Willey, Angela. 2015. “Constituting Compulsory Monogamy: Normative Femininity
at the Limits of Imagination.” Journal of Gender Studies 24(6):621–33.
———. 2016. Undoing Monogamy: The Politics of Science and the Possibilities of Biology.
Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Zerán, Faride, ed. 2018. Mayo feminista: La rebelión contra el patriarcado [Feminist
may: The rebellion against patriarchy]. Santiago de Chile: LOM ediciones.
y Alvarez et al.
Downloads
Publicado
Como Citar
Edição
Seção
Licença
Autoras/es que publicam nesta revista concordam com os seguintes termos:
1. Autoras/es mantém os direitos autorais e concedem à revista o direito de primeira publicação, com o trabalho simultaneamente licenciado sob a Creative Commons Attribution License que permitindo o compartilhamento do trabalho com reconhecimento da autoria do trabalho e publicação inicial nesta revista.
2. Autoras/es têm autorização para assumir contratos adicionais separadamente, para distribuição não-exclusiva da versão do trabalho publicada nesta revista (ex.: em repositório institucional ou como capítulo de livro), com reconhecimento de autoria e publicação inicial nesta revista.
3. Autoras/es têm permissão e são estimuladas/os a publicar e distribuir seu trabalho online (ex.: em repositórios institucionais ou na sua página pessoal) a qualquer ponto antes ou durante o processo editorial, já que isso pode gerar alterações produtivas, bem como aumentar o impacto e a citação do trabalho publicado.