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Sonia Cuales

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Curaçaoan feminist activist and writer (1941–2018)

Sonia Magdalena Cuales (October 3, 1941 – July 14, 2018) was aCuraçaoanfeminist activist and writer.[1] Her work in theUnited Nations system and with various advocacy groups focused on the intersection of women's rights and development across the Caribbean.

Career

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Sonia Cuales was born in Curaçao in 1941.[2][1] She immigrated to the Netherlands, where she studied anthropology and development sociology atLeiden University, obtaining a PhD in non-Western sociology.[2][3][4] Through her studies at Leiden, she conducted research on women laborers in Latin America and the Caribbean, and on the role of Jews in the historical development of Curaçao.[5][6] She became involved in the Antillian Women’s Organizations in the Netherlands during her years living there.[2]

Cuales returned to the Americas in the 1970s, and she became an active participant in the Caribbean's second-wave feminist movement.[7] She helped found theCaribbean Association for Feminist Research and Action (CAFRA) in 1985.[8][9] She was also a founding member of the Caribbean Network on Studies of Masculinities in 1997[10] and helped support the launching of the Annual Female Leadership Conferences in Curaçao in 2004.[1] In part throughDevelopment Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN), she was also involved in advocacy on reproductive rights.[11]

She worked in Colombia as a project officer forUNICEF's Regional Office in Latin America and the Caribbean, overseeing the organization's assistance to Guyana and Suriname.[2] She was then assigned to theUnited Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, working inTrinidad as a social affairs officer focusing on women and development.[3][1][12] She also worked on poverty eradication efforts.[13] After 18 years in the United Nations system, Cuales retired in 2001.[3]

In addition to her U.N. work, Cuales lectured on women's studies at the University of the Netherlands Antilles, now theUniversity of Curaçao.[2][14]

Writing

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Cuales authored various academic articles on women and feminism in the Caribbean.[2] She had an early interest insocialism, and she wrote frequently on the intersection of class and gender.[3][12][15]

She contributed to the 1984 anthologySisterhood Is Global, writing on feminism in the Dutch-speaking Caribbean.[14]

Personal life and recognition

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Sonia Cuales had one daughter, Gladys Cuales.[1][16]

She died in Curaçao in 2018.[17] In 2020, she was honored as that year's Outstanding Woman during the 17th Annual Female Leadership Conference in Curaçao.[1]

References

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  1. ^abcdef"2020 Outstanding Woman is posthumous Sonia Magdalena Cuales".Curaçao Chronicle. 2020-06-03. Retrieved2020-09-27.
  2. ^abcdef"Founding Mothers".Caribbean Association for Feminist Research and Action. Retrieved2020-09-27.
  3. ^abcd"Tributes to Sonia Cuales"(PDF).Gender Dialogue.5. December 2001.
  4. ^Women, feminism, and development. Piché, Denise, 1947-, Dagenais, Huguette,, Canadian Research Institute for the Advancement of Women. Conference (1988 : Québec, Québec), Université Laval. Groupe de recherche et d'échange multidisciplinaires féministes. Montréal, Que.: Published for the Canadian Research Institute for the Advancement of Women by McGill-Queen's University Press. 1994.ISBN 0-7735-1184-9.OCLC 232586676.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. ^"Literatuurlijst Sefardische Joden van Curaçao publicaties".The Mongui Maduro Library.
  6. ^à Nijeholt, G. Thomas-Lycklama (1979-06-07)."Feminisme en Wetenschap".LH (in Dutch).
  7. ^"Editorial: Rethinking Caribbean Difference".Feminist Review.59. 1998.
  8. ^"Minutes Of Launching".Caribbean Association for Feminist Research and Action. 1985-04-01. Retrieved2020-09-27.
  9. ^Baksh, Rawwida; Vassell, Linnette (2013).Women's Citizenship in the Democracies of the Americas: The English-speaking Caribbean(PDF). Inter-American Commission of Women, OAS.ISBN 978-0-8270-6031-9.
  10. ^Pizzini, Manuel Valdes; Reddock, Rhoda (2009-01-01)."Recordando a Rafa: testimonios de colegas y amigos".Caribbean Studies (in Spanish).37 (1):225–243.doi:10.1353/crb.0.0095.S2CID 142534349.
  11. ^Corrêa, Sonia; Reichmann, Rebecca Lynn (1994).Population and reproductive rights : feminist perspectives from the South. London: Zed Books.ISBN 1-85649-283-4.OCLC 31207476.
  12. ^abMohammed, Patricia; Shepherd, Catherine. (1999).Gender in Caribbean development : papers presented at the Inaugural Seminar of the University of the West Indies, Women and Development Studies Project (2nd ed.). Kingston, Jamaica: Canoe Press University of the West Indies.ISBN 976-8125-55-1.OCLC 43868198.
  13. ^"CARIBBEAN-POPULATION: Regional Governments Attack Poverty | Inter Press Service".Inter Press Service. 1996-10-21. Retrieved2020-09-27.
  14. ^abMorgan, Robin (1984).Sisterhood is global : the international women's movement anthology (First ed.). Garden City, N.Y.ISBN 0-385-17796-8.OCLC 10995757.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  15. ^"Nothing about us, without us"(PDF).The Yearbook of Women's History. Jaarboek Voorvrouwengeschiedenis 37. 2017: Gender and Archiving, Past, Present and Future. April 2017.
  16. ^"Sonia Magdalena Cuales".Extra Curaçao (in Papiamento). 17 July 2018. Retrieved2020-09-27.
  17. ^"Dr. Sonia Cuales, un katalisador pa empoderashon di hende muhé den Caribe".Extra Curaçao (in Papiamento). 2018-07-19. Retrieved2020-09-27.
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