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Lloret-Carrillo, Mónica

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Master in Humanistic Studies with an emphasis on ethics. Monica is a full-time professor at the EHE on the Campus Estado de México, where she teaches Citizenship and Social Responsibility, Ethics and Sustainability, Anthropology of the Body, and Gender Equity. She is a facilitator of inclusion, diversity and prevention of gender violence projects and recently developed a program for the topic "Gender Equity" for high school that is being carried out with two groups at CEM High School and Esmeralda High School. Along with her students, she is collaborating with DIF Tlalnepantla in one of the Shelters for families who are victims of violence. She also works with Milynali Red CFE Collective, a civil association that searches for its disappeared relatives and seeks to understand socio-political violence. Mónica participated in the 3rd international symposium "Climate Change and adaptation, Puebla, 2020" with the presentation: Women in rural Latin American economies and climate change, a product of field work carried out in San Cristóbal de las Casas at the International Center for Social Innovation in June 2019. Mónica is registered in "The Register of Specialists in Gender Studies and Feminism (REEGyF)" of the Center for Research and Gender Studies of the UNAM
Monica Lloret has a Master in Humanistic Studies, specializing in Gender and Feminist Studies. As part of her teaching, she has designed programs and subjects with a gender perspective for high schools in the Mexico City region and for the concentration in Creative Advertising and Citizenship. Additionally, Monica is a member of the Strategic Committee for Gender Equality of the School of Humanities and Education. Her classes incorporate projects in which her students work with actors from civil society and government entities, including: shelters for families victims of violence (DIF Tlalnepantla, 2020); collectives of mothers looking for justice for their disappeared children (Colectivo Milynali Red CFE, 2020-2022); and female collectives of artisan embroiderers(Jaivichil Indigenous Hands, 2019-2020). Her research interests include: the effects and consequences of climate change on women and other feminized bodies; climate impact on access to water and food and on migratory processes; public policy and resistance and the possibilities of access to power; and the decolonization of climate discourse. She is registered in the "Registry of Specialists in Gender and Feminism Studies (REEGyF)" of the Center for Research and Gender Studies of the UNAM https://cieg.unam.mx/info-especialistas.php
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