- The Oxford Handbook of Gender and Conflict
- Dedication
- Foreword I
- Foreword II
- Acknowledgments
- Editors and Contributors
- Introduction: Mapping the Terrain: Gender and Conflict in Contemporary Perspective
- Theories of War
- From Women and War to Gender and Conflict?: Feminist Trajectories
- The Silences in the Rules That Regulate Women during Times of Armed Conflict
- How Should We Explain the Recurrence of Violent Conflict, and What Might Gender Have to Do with It?
- The Gendered Nexus between Conflict and Citizenship in Historical Perspective
- Violent Conflict and Changes in Gender Economic Roles: Implications for Post-Conflict Economic Recovery
- Victims Who are Men
- Women, Peace, and Security: A Critical Analysis of the Security Council’s Vision
- Participation and Protection: Security Council Dynamics, Bureaucratic Politics, and the Evolution of the Women, Peace, and Security Agenda
- A Genealogy of the Centrality of Sexual Violence to Gender and Conflict
- 1325 + 17 = ?: Filling in the Blanks of the Women, Peace, and Security Agenda
- Complementarity and Convergence?: Women, Peace and Security and Counterterrorism
- Unlocking the Potential of CEDAW as an Important Accountability Tool for the Women, Peace and Security Agenda
- The Promise and Limits of Indicators on Women, Peace and Security
- Humanitarian Intervention and Gender Dynamics
- (Re)Considering Gender Jurisprudence
- Complementarity as a Catalyst for Gender Justice in National Prosecutions
- Forced Marriage during Conflict and Mass Atrocity
- Advancing Justice and Making Amends Through Reparations: Legal and Operational Considerations
- Colonialism
- Conflict, Displacement, and Refugees
- Gender and Forms of Conflict: The Moral Hazards of Dating the Security Council
- The Martial Rape of Girls and Women in Antiquity and Modernity
- “Mind the Gap”: Measuring and Understanding Gendered Conflict Experiences
- Intersectionality: Working in Conflict
- Agency and Gender Norms in War Economies
- Risk and Resilience: The Physical and Mental Health of Female Civilians during War
- The Gender Implications of Small Arms and Light Weapons in Conflict Situations
- Unmanned Weapons: Looking for the Gender Dimensions
- Gender and Peacekeeping
- Peacekeeping, Human Trafficking, and Sexual Abuse and Exploitation
- Women, Peace Negotiations, and Peace Agreements: Opportunities and Challenges
- Women’s Organizations and Peace Initiatives
- Gender and Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration: Reviewing and Advancing the Field
- Decolonial Feminism, Gender, and Transitional Justice in Latin America
- Gender and Governance in Post-Conflict and Democratizing Settings
- Who Defines the Red Lines?: The Prospects for Safeguarding Women’s Rights and Securing Their Future in Post-Transition Afghanistan
- “That’s Not My Daughter”: The Paradoxes of Documenting Jihadist Mass Rape in 1990s Algeria and Beyond
- Consequences of Conflict-Related Sexual Violence on Post-Conflict Society: Case Study of Reparations in Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Colombia: Gender and Land Restitution
- Knowing Masculinities in Armed Conflict?: Reflections from Research in the Democratic Republic of Congo
- Northern Ireland: The Significance of a Bottom-Up Women’s Movement in a Politically Contested Society
- Gendered Suffering and the Eviction of the Native: The Politics of Birth in Occupied East Jerusalem
- Rwanda: Women’s Political Participation in Post-Conflict State-Building
- Sri Lanka: The Impact of Militarization on Women
- Index
Abstract and Keywords
This chapter focuses on the absence of certain marginal groups from the United Nations’ Women, Peace, and Security Agenda and suggests correctives to those exclusions. The chapter discusses how men and boys as victims of sexual and gender-based violence have been erased in this agenda, and the consequences of this erasure. It challenges the assumptions of militarized masculinity as a uniformly shared identity among conflict-engaged men. It also looks at the outcome of pregnancies resulting from wartime rape and shows how children born of rape are presented and treated in their communities. The chapter draws on research conducted in Peru and Colombia and shows the necessity of understanding both the perpetration and experience of violence in nuanced ways.
Keywords: militarized masculinity, Women, Peace and Security Agenda, wartime rape, children born of rape, men as victims, Peru, Colombia
Kimberly Theidon, a medical anthropologist, is the Henry J. Leir Professor of International Humanitarian Studies at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. Her research interests include political violence, transitional justice, reconciliation, and the politics of postwar reparations. She is the author of many articles, and Entre Prójimos: El conflicto armado interno y la política de la reconciliación en el Perú (Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, 1st edition, 2004; 2nd edition, 2009) and Intimate Enemies: Violence and Reconciliation in Peru (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012).
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- The Oxford Handbook of Gender and Conflict
- Dedication
- Foreword I
- Foreword II
- Acknowledgments
- Editors and Contributors
- Introduction: Mapping the Terrain: Gender and Conflict in Contemporary Perspective
- Theories of War
- From Women and War to Gender and Conflict?: Feminist Trajectories
- The Silences in the Rules That Regulate Women during Times of Armed Conflict
- How Should We Explain the Recurrence of Violent Conflict, and What Might Gender Have to Do with It?
- The Gendered Nexus between Conflict and Citizenship in Historical Perspective
- Violent Conflict and Changes in Gender Economic Roles: Implications for Post-Conflict Economic Recovery
- Victims Who are Men
- Women, Peace, and Security: A Critical Analysis of the Security Council’s Vision
- Participation and Protection: Security Council Dynamics, Bureaucratic Politics, and the Evolution of the Women, Peace, and Security Agenda
- A Genealogy of the Centrality of Sexual Violence to Gender and Conflict
- 1325 + 17 = ?: Filling in the Blanks of the Women, Peace, and Security Agenda
- Complementarity and Convergence?: Women, Peace and Security and Counterterrorism
- Unlocking the Potential of CEDAW as an Important Accountability Tool for the Women, Peace and Security Agenda
- The Promise and Limits of Indicators on Women, Peace and Security
- Humanitarian Intervention and Gender Dynamics
- (Re)Considering Gender Jurisprudence
- Complementarity as a Catalyst for Gender Justice in National Prosecutions
- Forced Marriage during Conflict and Mass Atrocity
- Advancing Justice and Making Amends Through Reparations: Legal and Operational Considerations
- Colonialism
- Conflict, Displacement, and Refugees
- Gender and Forms of Conflict: The Moral Hazards of Dating the Security Council
- The Martial Rape of Girls and Women in Antiquity and Modernity
- “Mind the Gap”: Measuring and Understanding Gendered Conflict Experiences
- Intersectionality: Working in Conflict
- Agency and Gender Norms in War Economies
- Risk and Resilience: The Physical and Mental Health of Female Civilians during War
- The Gender Implications of Small Arms and Light Weapons in Conflict Situations
- Unmanned Weapons: Looking for the Gender Dimensions
- Gender and Peacekeeping
- Peacekeeping, Human Trafficking, and Sexual Abuse and Exploitation
- Women, Peace Negotiations, and Peace Agreements: Opportunities and Challenges
- Women’s Organizations and Peace Initiatives
- Gender and Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration: Reviewing and Advancing the Field
- Decolonial Feminism, Gender, and Transitional Justice in Latin America
- Gender and Governance in Post-Conflict and Democratizing Settings
- Who Defines the Red Lines?: The Prospects for Safeguarding Women’s Rights and Securing Their Future in Post-Transition Afghanistan
- “That’s Not My Daughter”: The Paradoxes of Documenting Jihadist Mass Rape in 1990s Algeria and Beyond
- Consequences of Conflict-Related Sexual Violence on Post-Conflict Society: Case Study of Reparations in Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Colombia: Gender and Land Restitution
- Knowing Masculinities in Armed Conflict?: Reflections from Research in the Democratic Republic of Congo
- Northern Ireland: The Significance of a Bottom-Up Women’s Movement in a Politically Contested Society
- Gendered Suffering and the Eviction of the Native: The Politics of Birth in Occupied East Jerusalem
- Rwanda: Women’s Political Participation in Post-Conflict State-Building
- Sri Lanka: The Impact of Militarization on Women
- Index