
@article{ref1,
title="&quot;Bad Mothers&quot; and the Threat to Civil Society: Race, Cultural Reasoning, and the Institutionalization of Social Inequality in a Venezuelan Infanticide Trial",
journal="Law and social inquiry",
year="2000",
author="Briggs, Charles L. and Mantini-Briggs, Clara",
volume="25",
number="2",
pages="299-354",
abstract="Suffering from abdominal pain, a young woman in eastern Venezuela went to a physician. The physician did not examine her but injected her with a sedative and sent her home to the place where she worked as a domestic. Awakening with intense cramps, she went to the bathroom and gave birth to a girl, who fell into the toilet bowl. On the basis of what was construed as a confession, her employer's statement, and medical testimony, the woman was convicted of homicide. The major issue was the legal significance of her racialization as &quot;indigenous.&quot; We suggest that her trial shows how courts construe structural violence directed against poor women of color as criminal conduct; ironically, this transformation was effected through culturally based arguments, presented by the defense, which claimed that the woman was ignorant of &quot;Western culture&quot; and Venezuelan legal norms, including the prohibition against infanticide. In the face of a cholera epidemic, dominant institutions used the case to suggest that &quot;indigenous culture&quot; could explain hundreds of deaths. Comparison with trials in the capital indicates that as globalization forces some 80% of Venezuelans into poverty, these widely publicized trials turn stereotypes of poor citizens as impoverished, immoral, and criminal into arguments that legitimate the repressive functions of the nation-state.<p />",
language="",
issn="0897-6546",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}