| Resumo: | In this article, I analyze how contemporary capitalism reconfigures gender inequalities in the rural territories of Mexico. From a feminist and multi-scalar perspective, I argue that these inequalities cannot be understood in isolation, but rather in relation to the socio-spatial reconfigurations generated by extractivism, climate change, and new forms of territorial governance. My aim is to contribute to the field of gender studies through a critical approach that links the everyday with structural processes, bodies with geographies, and local memories with global circuits, thereby interrogating the conditions of spatial and gender justice in rural contexts shaped by globalization.
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