Global Journal of Human-Social Science, A: Arts and Humanities, Volume 22 Issue 11

taken up in this research), the following general and perfectible proposals are presented, which are intended to provoke reflection on actions that contribute to the social reaction to the figure of such women, whose situations are a public problem: 1. That the work performed by the women searchers, in addition to being a right of victims, be recognized as work for the community and, therefore, deserving of remuneration that meets their needs, given the impact this activity has on their lives and the importance of these women as leaders in the searches. Even more so, considering that the search for missing persons is an obligation of the State as it is a crime against humanity. 2. That there be a list with the number of specific women searchers that is part of the National Search Registry (RENAVI), which should include variables that indicate their living conditions, economic position, material needs and strategic interests. Likewise, women from civil society who join the searches should not be left out of the registry, in order to generate mechanisms that provide greater security and protection measures at the federal and state levels. 3. That the legal frameworks that make their human rights as women seekers effective be reviewed and adapted, and that coordination and cooperation processes be carried out between state and federal entities and international organizations to improve themand supervise their compliance. 4. That the methodology of a logical framework be used in the design of a public policy with a gender perspective that identifies and responds to the material needs and strategic interests of the women seekers and, thus, articulates efforts between civil and academic society, institutions and authorities at all levels of government. 5. Promote awareness in the society in which the searchers operate towards the prevention of disappearances, allocating more space for media coverage and, in this way, promote workshops and courses with experts in forensic science in the search and identification of missing persons, in which the participation of the searchers is contemplated. VI. C onclusions The situation of the women searchers needs to be shown as a public problem based on the tools provided by the Gender Theory. To do so, it is possible to dimension their realities with the differential impact that occurs in the environment in which they are located as women, either as victims and/or participants or in the context of abandonment and violence that affects them. Based on the above, the construction of a public policy is required under a gender analysis that identifies their roles, material needs, strategic interests, social position, living conditions and reveals the inequalities, discriminations and violence that affect women; it isnecessary to transform the circumstances in which they find themselves from their situationas victims. To achieve this transformation, it is necessary to make adjustments in legal, administrative, institutional and budgetary frameworks that recognize how their work transcends socially and emphasize the guarantee of the human right that every person has: to be sought with the persistence, conviction and tenacity as they do, dignifying the value of every person. However, we must not forget the reality of the reality of the women searchers, which is marked by abandonment, inequalities and violence on the part of the State and society. Their identities run the risk of being omitted in order to be identified as members of a family. There is a need to construct indicators to measure and monitor the protection of the human rights of women searchers as women. They need to be recognized as women and their human rights must be respected and protected; the logical framework methodology offers, for public policy planning, different paths that respond to the diverse situations that make the situation of women searchers more complex in the face of a gendered social order. R eferences R éférences R eferencias 1. Aguilar, L. (2007). El estudio de las políticas públicas . México, Porrúa. 2. Barragán, A. (2022, 26 de febrero). Cecilia Flores: “Quiero volver a ver a mis hijos, aunque sea en un puño de huesos.” El País. https://elpais.com/ mexico/2022-02-26/cecilia-flores-quiero -volver-a-ver -a-mis-hijos-aunque-sea-en-un-punado-de-huesos. html 3. Moyn, S. (2012). The last utopia . Human Rights in Hystory . España, Harvard University Press. 4. García, E. (2013). Guía 4. Conceptos y herramientas básicas del análisis de género. Diplomado Básico en Políticas y Género . México, FLACSO. 5. Comisión Nacional de Búsqueda de Personas Desaparecidas. (2022, 29 de noviembre). Contexto general. [Versión pública]. https://versionpublicarn pdno.segob.gob.mx/Dashboard /ContextoGeneral 6. Comité de Desaparición Forzada de la ONU. (2021, 26 de noviembre). Informe del Comité contra las Desapariciones Forzadas en México. 2021. https:// tbinternet.ohchr.org/_layouts/15/treat ybodyexternal/ Download.aspx?symbolno=INT%2fCED%2fINF%2f MEX%2f22%2f33833&L ang=en 7. . (2022, 17 de mayo). México: El oscuro hito de 100,000 desapariciones refleja un patron de impunidad, advierten expertos de la ONU . ohchr.org/es/statements/2022/05/mexico-dark-land mark-100000-disappearances-reflects-pattern-impu nity-un-experts Volume XXII Issue XI Version I 24 ( ) Global Journal of Human Social Science - Year 2022 © 2022 Global Journals A Women Searching for Missing Persons in Mexico. Guidelines for a Public Policy with a Gender Perspective

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