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Nigel Baker

Ambassador to the Holy See (2011-2016)

Part of UK in Bolivia

9th March 2011

Guest blog: The challenges of making Bolivia a less patriarchal society

To commemorate the centenary on 8 March of International Womens Day, I am delighted to welcome to our site a guest blogger, Katia Uriona Gamarra*
Bolivia is living a political process in which women from different organizations and movements have arisen as political actors, placing in the public debate agendas related to raising complaints and the enforceability and generation of proposals that challenge the subordination, exclusion, discrimination and poverty faced by the majority of women in the country.
The actions of this plural and diverse movement of mobilized women with a leading role at national level achieved the inclusion in the new political Constitution of the State (January 2009) of principles and articles relating to social equity and gender, equivalent representation and recognition of specific women’s rights. This new regulatory framework forms a new base for the enforcement of public policies and social practices that enable the transformation of State, organisation, community and family institutions and patriarchal structures which make up society.
Depatriarchalisation has been raised as a challenge.  This is understood as a structural basis to transform the relations of power that exclude and oppress women; the removal of the patriarchy, defined  as “A social hierarchical structure, based on a set of prejudices, symbols, ideas, customs and even laws regarding women, by which male gender dominates and oppresses women” (Montero and Nieto 2002).
Part of this challenge should be to distort hierarchical practices based on the exercise of power of men, the modification of norms, values, functions and symbolic imaginary roles that are assigned to women within families, schools, religion, the media and the State’s own structures and policies.
The proposed women’s agenda at the same time raises the need to articulate it with the agenda of decolonization proposed by different indigenous, native and peasant movements.  And the recognition as the transformative base of the Bolivian political process of two historical forms of oppression based on power relations that, in the case of Bolivia, have subordinated  the majority of indigenous peasant and native women.

*Katia Uriona is a womens rights activist and Director of the Co-ordination of Women, a network of NGOs in Bolivia that works on processes of empowerment, emancipation, organisational capacity building, and for the promotion and defence of the rights of women www.coordinadoramujer.org

About Nigel Baker

Nigel was British Ambassador to the Holy See from 2011-2016. He presented his Credentials to Pope Benedict XVI on 9 September 2011, after serving 8 years in Latin America, as…

Nigel was British Ambassador to the Holy See from 2011-2016. He presented his Credentials to Pope Benedict XVI on 9 September 2011, after serving 8 years in Latin America, as Deputy Head of Mission in the British Embassy in Havana, Cuba (2003-6) and then as British Ambassador in La Paz, Bolivia (2007-11). In July 2016, Nigel finished his posting, and is currently back in London.

As the first British Ambassador to the Holy See ever to have a blog, Nigel provided a regular window on what the Embassy and the Ambassador does. The blogs covered a wide range of issues, from Royal and Ministerial visits to Diplomacy and Faith, freedom of religion, human trafficking and climate change.

More on Nigel’s career

Nigel was based in London between 1998 and 2003. He spent two years on European Union issues (for the UK 1998 EU Presidency and on European Security and Defence questions), before crossing St James’s Park to work for three years as The Assistant Private Secretary to His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales. At St James’s Palace, Nigel worked on international issues, including the management of The Prince of Wales’s overseas visits and tours, on the Commonwealth, interfaith issues, the arts and international development.

Nigel spent much of the early part of his FCO career in Central Europe, after an initial stint as Desk Officer for the Maghreb countries in the Near East and North Africa department (1990-91). Between 1992 and 1996, Nigel served in the British embassies in Prague and Bratislava, the latter being created in 1993 after the peaceful division of Czechoslovakia into the separate Czech and Slovak Republics.

Nigel joined the FCO (Foreign and Commonwealth Office) in September 1989. Between 1996 and 1998 he took a two year academic sabbatical to research and write about themes in 18th century European history, being based in Verona but also researching in Cambridge, Paris and Naples. The research followed from Nigel’s time as a student at Cambridge (1985-88) where he read history and was awarded a First Class Honours degree, followed by his MA in 1992.

Before joining the Foreign Office, Nigel worked briefly for the Conservative Research Department in London at the time of the 1989 European election campaign.

Nigel married Alexandra (Sasha) in 1997. They have one son, Benjamin, born in Bolivia in September 2008.

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