This issue of Ecología Política explores hydrofeminisms in Latin America as a tool for rethinking the relationships between water, bodies, territories, and power, beyond the notion of water as a resource or commodity. Drawing on situated experiences across diverse Latin American territories, the articles address Indigenous, peasant, Afro-descendant, community-based, and feminist struggles against extractivism, coloniality, patriarchy, and water injustice. Through case studies, graphic narratives, artistic practices, cartographies, and experimental methodologies, the dossier shows how waters are also memory, connection, body, and territory, contributing to the imagination of politics of care, reciprocity, and re-existence.
Publication date: June 2026
Open access: June 2027










