FROM SEEDS TO ASSEMBLIES. AGROECOLOGY AS A TOOL FOR POLITICAL PARTICIPATION A Case Study on Q’qechi’ Mayan Peasant Women in Zona Reina, Guatemala
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Date
2025-07-02
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Abstract
Indigenous women’s political participation remains limited due to intersecting inequalities. 
Nevertheless, sustainable initiatives such as agroecology have proved to empower 
communities and promote social engagement. This research investigates the political 
dimension of agroecology by examining how it can affect Indigenous women's political 
participation. Social Capital Theory and Empowerment Theory are used to identify the 
mechanisms through which agroecology fosters such participation investigating the case of 
Q’qechi’ women in Zona Reina, Guatemala. Using a qualitative case study approach with 
ethnographic participatory methods and semi-structured interviews, mechanisms from both 
theories are identified. Capabilities, resources, bonding and bridging social capital and 
ancestral knowledge have been shown to have a big influence in expanding social capital and 
empowering participants, which has a positive impact on political participation despite the 
presence of some barriers. The findings provide a guideline for institutions and communities 
to start similar initiatives in other parts of the world. Future research should replicate this 
study in other contexts to identify whether the mechanisms are context-dependent and analyse 
the time dimension of the effects.
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Keywords
Agroecology, Indigenous Women, Political Participation, Social Capital,  Empowerment