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  2. Women in Ecuador - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Ecuador

    Women are more likely to be unemployed. In 2019, the unemployment rate for women in Ecuador was 5.0%, and male unemployment was 3.3%. [4] In 2012, the total labor force was roughly 7.39 million people. [5] In comparison this means roughly 125,630 more women are going unemployed. In 2013 the CDT stated in rural areas women made $219 monthly ...

  3. Nemonte Nenquimo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nemonte_Nenquimo

    Nemonte Nenquimo is an Indigenous activist, author and member of the Waorani Nation from the Amazonian Region of Ecuador. She is the first female president of the Waorani of Pastaza (CONCONAWEP) and co-founder of the Indigenous-led nonprofit organization Ceibo Alliance. In 2020, she was named in the Time 100 list of the 100 most influential ...

  4. Women's suffrage in Ecuador - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women's_suffrage_in_Ecuador

    Ecuador was the first country in South America to introduce women's suffrage. [2][3] Women were explicitly excluded from suffrage in the Constitution of 1884. In the Constitution of 1897, women's rights were improved and the definition of a voter was made gender neutral, however it was still informally understood that women were not to exercise ...

  5. Indigenous women in Ecuador take on soccer by inventing a ...

    www.aol.com/news/indigenous-women-ecuador-soccer...

    Handball with anaco was created by a group of entrepreneurial women from Turucu, located 67 kilometers (41.63 miles) north of the capital, a picturesque indigenous Quichua community surrounded by ...

  6. Waorani people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waorani_people

    The Waorani, Waodani, or Huaorani, also known as the Waos, are an Indigenous people from the Amazonian Region of Ecuador (Napo, Orellana, and Pastaza Provinces) who have marked differences from other ethnic groups from Ecuador. The alternate name Auca is a pejorative exonym used by the neighboring Quechua natives, and commonly adopted by ...

  7. Ecuadorians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecuadorians

    Ecuadorians (Spanish: ecuatorianos) are people identified with the South American country of Ecuador. This connection may be residential, legal, historical or cultural. For most Ecuadorians, several (or all) of these connections exist and are collectively the source of their being Ecuadorian. Numerous indigenous cultures inhabited what is now ...

  8. Virgin of Quito - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virgin_of_Quito

    The Virgin of Quito (Spanish, La Virgen de Quito) — also known as the Virgin of the Apocalypse, Winged Virgin of Quito, Dancing Madonna, and Legarda's Virgin — is a wooden sculpture by the Quiteño artist Bernardo de Legarda (ca. 1700-1773) which has become the most representative example of the Quito School of art, developed in the Ecuadorian capital during the Spanish colonial era.

  9. Dayuma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dayuma

    Dayuma (also Dayumae) (born ca. 1930, - March 1, 2014) was a member of the Huaorani tribe and a citizen of Ecuador.She is a central figure in the Operation Auca saga, in that she was the first Huao to convert to Christianity, as well as the missionaries' key to unlocking the Huaorani language, a language that had not been previously studied.

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