54 min

158. Carolina Ramírez on Decolonizing Menstrual Hygiene & Education in Latin America Womanhood & International Relations

    • News Commentary

What is the colonial history of menstrual health, hygiene and education in Latin America? How important is the language used in family settings, schools, business ads, health clinics and government policies to reproduce or reduce the menstrual shame and stigma that is passed on through generations? Why words such as "hygiene", "poverty" and "purification" are used by international development agendas to address menstruation as a "sanitation crises" in the Global South? What needs to change in the local and international approach to decolonize menstrual health, hygiene and education in this region?

On World Menstrual Hygiene Day 2023, we feature a Spanish-language interview with Psychologist Carolina Ramirez, founder of Princesas Menstruantes, Escuela de Educación Emancipadas and Coordinator of Encuentro Latinoamericano de Educación, Salud y Activismos Menstruales.

Join us in this exploration, follow us on Instagram, Twitter and LinkedIn @womanhood_ir 

Listen to related episodes:


79. Menstrual Hygiene Day: Poverty, Culture and Sustainability
85. Carla Giacummo on Menstrual Health Education in Uruguay
96. Danielle Keiser on COVID-19's Impact on Menstrual Health Education
157. Kat Plouffe on Launching a Sustainable Period Startup
159. Dr. Shraddha Kale on Menstrual Health, Hygiene & Education in Mumbai's Slums

Recommended links of this episode:


Princesas Menstruantes Official Website
Escuela de Educación Menstrual Emancipadas Official Website
Revista Menstrúa
Educadoras Menstruales
Princesas Menstruantes Instagram
Emancipadas Instagram



Background music credit: Roman Kostiuk, A Small Miracle - Pixabay License

What is the colonial history of menstrual health, hygiene and education in Latin America? How important is the language used in family settings, schools, business ads, health clinics and government policies to reproduce or reduce the menstrual shame and stigma that is passed on through generations? Why words such as "hygiene", "poverty" and "purification" are used by international development agendas to address menstruation as a "sanitation crises" in the Global South? What needs to change in the local and international approach to decolonize menstrual health, hygiene and education in this region?

On World Menstrual Hygiene Day 2023, we feature a Spanish-language interview with Psychologist Carolina Ramirez, founder of Princesas Menstruantes, Escuela de Educación Emancipadas and Coordinator of Encuentro Latinoamericano de Educación, Salud y Activismos Menstruales.

Join us in this exploration, follow us on Instagram, Twitter and LinkedIn @womanhood_ir 

Listen to related episodes:


79. Menstrual Hygiene Day: Poverty, Culture and Sustainability
85. Carla Giacummo on Menstrual Health Education in Uruguay
96. Danielle Keiser on COVID-19's Impact on Menstrual Health Education
157. Kat Plouffe on Launching a Sustainable Period Startup
159. Dr. Shraddha Kale on Menstrual Health, Hygiene & Education in Mumbai's Slums

Recommended links of this episode:


Princesas Menstruantes Official Website
Escuela de Educación Menstrual Emancipadas Official Website
Revista Menstrúa
Educadoras Menstruales
Princesas Menstruantes Instagram
Emancipadas Instagram



Background music credit: Roman Kostiuk, A Small Miracle - Pixabay License

54 min