“…As defined in the Mexican Federal Criminal Code, “feminicide involves a killing of a woman for gender reasons”; it includes intimate partner violence, the most prevalent form of feminicide in Mexico, and violence committed by other actors known or unknown to the victim (Frías, 2021, p. 7). It does not include violence stemming from “gender discriminatory practices,” such as “preventable” and noncriminalized maternal mortality, malnutrition, and forced sterilization (Frías, 2021, p. 6), nor does it typically include “murders of indigenous women associated with defense of communal properties, conflict among indigenous communities, and violent acts of mass killing due to the militarization of rural areas, and the presence of paramilitary groups” because of the narrow interpretation of what constitutes “gender reasons” (Frías, 2021, p. 7). Although the Latin American Protocol for Investigating Violent Deaths of Women for Gender Reasons 8 recognizes various forms of feminicide depending on the age and racial, sexual, and gender identity of victims, such as child, racist, lesbophobic, and transphobic feminicide, as well as the context in which the murder occurred, ranging from familial to prostitution and sex‐trafficking contexts (Frías, 2021, p. 6), the relationship between militarization and feminicide is absent, as is an indigenous feminist understanding of gender violence as inextricable from neocolonial violence geared toward the dispossession of indigenous land and the destruction of indigenous cultures and dissent (Frías, 2021, p. 7; Millan, 2022).…”