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Mexico

For pluralism to flourish in Mexico, Indigenous and Afro-Mexican recognition must not only be legislated but embraced and acted upon.

Mexico has long been recognized as an inclusive and multicultural nation. The Monitor assessment shows that Mexicans see their nation as unified. Political discourse, policies and national identity celebrate Mexico’s diverse population and rich Indigenous culture. At the same time, exclusion, discrimination and commodification of Indigenous peoples and Afro-Mexicans persists in everyday life. Although Mexico has made efforts to improve recognition of Indigenous and Afro-Mexican peoples contributions to the country through reforms and policies, an implementation gap persists. Racism, violence and socioeconomic inequalities shroud the realities of Indigenous and Afro-Mexican groups. Meanwhile, migrants face a violent and militarized migration system. The Global Pluralism Monitor: Mexico report explores many experiences and challenges for inclusion across Mexican history and the present,

Takeaways

Gap between policy and practice

Mexico has adopted national policies aimed at recognizing Indigenous and Afro-descendant peoples. Yet, these groups are still subject to discrimination and state neglect in most of the country. Likewise, the detention of migrants is often framed as a security issue and humanitarian policy. However, the current militarized approach tends to subject migrants to different forms of violence, endangerment and socioeconomic inequalities.

Diverse groups are underrepresented in Mexican institutions and society

Indigenous peoples and Afro-Mexicans experience disproportionate rates of poverty, marginalization and violence. Without policies meant to address these inequalities, these groups often face barriers to education and employment. As a result, Indigenous and Afro-Mexican peoples face underrepresentation in the legislature and formal job positions. Migrants are also not represented in data collection, state-based institutions and society. The lack of data collected on these groups is a key barrier to creating policies that address these inequalities.

Indigenous, Afro-Mexican and Migrant women are more vulnerable to violence and poor outcomes

The Monitor report points to a crisis of gender-based violence that impacts women across the country. However, Indigenous, Afro-Mexican and migrant women are significantly more vulnerable to this violence due to their ethnicity and socioeconomic status. Women in these groups likewise experience worse social outcomes, including poor access to maternal health care, social services, education and paid labour in comparison to their non-racialized or male counterparts. Impunity for gender-based violence is common across Mexico.

Drivers of Pluralism in Mexico

These best practices are driving and enhancing pluralism in Mexico.

Vibrant Civil Society

Civil society networks are strong and prompt coordination and solidarity among diverse groups. Indigenous and Afro-Mexican civil society organizations promote civic engagement.

Increased Recognition

National and subnational efforts have been made to recognize Indigenous and Afro-Mexican peoples, and some promises have materialized to include Afro-Mexican history in school textbooks.

Data Collection

Mexican institutions have innovated ways to collect and analyze quantitative and qualitative data on Indigenous peoples and Afro-Mexicans’ quality of life.

Recommendations

Reduce barriers to Indigenous self-determination

Indigenous peoples need to have decision-making authority especially in the use of natural resources in their territories. This requires constitutional and legal recognition of Indigenous peoples as collective rights-holders. Having some control over the use of resources in their territories could reduce exploitation and internal displacement which are common in current extractive projects.

Dismantle structural discrimination and guarantee human rights

Social and economic policies should be designed with Indigenous and Afro-Mexicans’ input to ensure they are culturally relevant. Policies to regulate migration should respect Mexico’s international human rights commitments and should move away from a violent and militarized approach. Migrants should be able to access work and exercise labour rights.

Improve education to facilitate interracial and intercultural understanding

The media can play an important role in mobilizing positive representations of Indigenous, Afro-Mexican, and migrant communities. This can also support more comprehensive understanding of the country’s social complexity and diversity. Cultural and artistic production that is respectful and sensitive to the diverse identities of all Mexicans can also play an important and positive role.

Scores

Legal Commitments

International Commitments

Average score: 9

Mexico has signed and ratified all major international and many regional human rights agreements. The country actively engages with mechanisms monitoring compliance with these agreements. However, some major violations of treaties have been reported.

National Commitments

Average score: 5

A constitutional reform to recognize Indigenous and Afro-Mexican groups as collective rights-holders with the power to make decisions about their communities has begun but not yet been implemented. Recognition of Indigenous rights is also not equal at the subnational level. There is no legislative agenda to mainstream migrants’ access to work, health care, identity documents or housing.

Inclusive Citizenship

Average score: 6

Mexican citizenship is obtained either by birth or naturalization. According to the Constitution, Mexicans and foreigners both enjoy the protection of human rights. However, irregular or undocumented migration is common and is linked to abuse and mistreatment. There are deep bonds of Indigenous citizenship and community engagement in certain localities. Afro-Mexicans do not enjoy equal access to social services, being characterized mostly as second-class citizens.

Practices

Policy Implementation

Average score: 4

Current social assistance programs are poorly funded and do not engage Indigenous and Afro-descendant peoples in their design. At the local level, corruption and discrimination often deny these groups access to health care and other services. The use of violence in controlling migratory flows contravenes international human rights commitments.

Data Collection

Average score: 6

Shifts to self-identification for Indigenous and Afro-Mexican peoples has resulted in more accurate data collection and analysis on social discrimination related to race and ethnicity. However, data about migrant populations is limited and rarely collected. Public research institutions and non-governmental organizations have filled some data collection gaps in this area.

Claims-making and Contestation

Average score: 5

Mexicans often exercise their rights to peaceful assembly. In March 2020, tens of thousands of women initiated a one-day strike to protest the rise in femicides. However, Mexicans and migrants face violence from state and non-state actors, especially when defending natural resources from extractive projects, or in migrant caravans and movement across borders.

Leadership for Pluralism

Political Parties

Average score: 3

Polarization and clientelism characterize the current landscape of political parties. While at the national level, all parties discuss the value of Indigenous and Afro-Mexican populations, most do not include them as candidates for office. At the subnational level, parties generally do not acknowledge migrants whatsoever.

News Media: Representation (A)

Average score: 2

News media perpetuates polarized political narratives and promotes negative stereotypes about Indigenous peoples, Afro-Mexicans, and migrants. Overall, media tends to whiten Mexican-ness and the diversity inherent in Mexican society is not represented in the mainstream.

News Media: Prominence of Pluralistic Actors (B)

Average score: 2.5

Mainstream media actors dominate the landscape. However, alternative media and social media play a role in preserving and celebrating Indigenous culture and offering dignified portrayals of migrants.

Civil Society

Average score: 9

Civil society is very strong, with many organizations exercising influence over public life. They offer support to diverse groups in the justice system, collect and analyze key data on discrimination, and demand accountability from the government. On the other hand, religious civil society tends to be very conservative and a leading voice against LGBTQ+ rights in Mexico.

Private Sector

Average score: 3

There is uneven adoption of measures to ensure equity in workplaces and promote respect and non-discrimination. Unskilled manual labour or informal jobs are largely filled by Indigenous, Afro-descendant, or migrant peoples. Women are overrepresented in informal, unskilled and unpaid labour.

Group-based Inequalities

Political

Average score: 5

Affirmative action policies are in place to improve representation of women, Indigenous and Afro-Mexican peoples but they are ineffective in practice. In many cases, candidates falsely represent themselves as part of an Indigenous community or claim to be transgender to meet gender parity requirements. Migrants are completely unrepresented in government.

Economic

Average score: 3

Indigenous and Afro-Mexican peoples largely live in more rural areas characterized by extreme poverty. Wealth gaps are significant in Mexico and women typically shoulder the burden of family care and household economic management. Migration processes are very costly and migrants often fall prey to organized crime, leaving migrants in financial precarity and dangerous situations. Some migrants can obtain work permits, but there is little information made available to them about how to go through the process.

Social

Average score: 4

Poverty, poor health outcomes, illiteracy and discrimination are common among Afro-Mexican and Indigenous groups. The infant mortality rate is highest among the Indigenous population, largely due to the racist treatment that Indigenous women face in hospitals. There is little data on social inequality of migrants, though it is known that they lack access to health care and education.

Cultural

Average score: 4

Indigenous cultural products are often stolen and commodified without fair compensation to Indigenous peoples. Indigenous languages also disappear in favour of the dominant Spanish. Migrants and Afro-descendant peoples experience xenophobia and anti-Black racism, with Afro-Mexicans being generally outside the national Mexican imaginary. Recently, efforts have been made to recognize and celebrate the contributions of Afro-descendants to Mexican history.

Access to Justice

Average score: 4

There is general impunity for violent crime in Mexico, especially related to drugs and organized crime. Indigenous peoples seeking justice face violence and lack of access to services in their local languages. Afro-Mexicans, on the other hand, are often detained and mistaken for migrants. In Mexico, anti-Black racism and anti-migration discrimination are closely intertwined.

Intergroup Relations and Belonging

Intergroup violence

Average score: 5

Organized crime persists and particularly impacts rural and Indigenous peoples. There is rampant violence and discrimination against Black and LGBTQ+ communities. Migrants experience violence from state and non-state actors.

Intergroup Trust

Average score: 3

There is distrust of migrants among Mexican populations and overall discrimination against Afro-Mexicans. While Indigeneity has become a part of Mexico’s nation-building narrative, negative stereotypes against Indigenous peoples undermine intergroup trust.

Trust in Institutions

Average score: 3

The Pluralism Perceptions Survey highlighted low levels of trust in institutions, particularly security authorities/police and the justice system. Migrants tend to trust their own communities but are suspicious of state authorities.

Inclusion and Acceptance

Average score: 3

The Pluralism Perceptions Survey respondents expressed some unity in feeling that Mexico is one nation, though this sentiment has the negative impact of erasing diversity. Despite this finding, the report shows how Indigenous peoples do not experience much inclusion and see their right to speak their language constantly violated. Migrants are not often accepted and included as part of communities.

Shared Ownership of Society

Average score: 3

Overall feelings of shared ownership of society are low across groups as they feel they do not have decision-making power and the ability to influence outcomes in their own lives. Despite government initiatives meant to foster respect for diversity, every day social interactions are, in many cases, racist and discriminatory.