Moving to Your Place: Labour Coercion and Punitive Violence against Minors under Guardianship (Charcas, Sixteenth through Eighteenth Centuries)

dc.contributor.authorPaola Revilla Orías
dc.coverage.spatialBolivia
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-22T18:56:10Z
dc.date.available2026-03-22T18:56:10Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.description.abstractAbstract This article examines the experience of minors at the intersection of guardianship, domestic servitude (free and unfree labour), and punitive violence in Charcas (Bolivia) in the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries. The author proposes that the study of the role of punishment in the lives of working children and adolescents allows us to question how practices that occurred under the legal cloak of guardianship – in which many members of colonial society participated – were used as a hidden practice of domination that sought to reproduce servitude based on certain origins from an early age. In this context, punitive violence exercised by masters and lords would have been at the core of prevailing prejudices about ethnic and racial difference.
dc.identifier.doi10.1017/s0020859022000888
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1017/s0020859022000888
dc.identifier.urihttps://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/73074
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherCambridge University Press
dc.relation.ispartofInternational Review of Social History
dc.sourceUniversidad Católica Bolivia San Pablo
dc.subjectPunitive damages
dc.subjectLegal guardian
dc.subjectPunishment (psychology)
dc.subjectCriminology
dc.subjectCorporal punishment
dc.subjectCoercion (linguistics)
dc.subjectContext (archaeology)
dc.subjectConfession (law)
dc.subjectLaw
dc.subjectPolitical science
dc.titleMoving to Your Place: Labour Coercion and Punitive Violence against Minors under Guardianship (Charcas, Sixteenth through Eighteenth Centuries)
dc.typearticle

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