Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:360Hits:19929765Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID121906
Title ProperFemale combatants and the perpetration of violence
Other Title Informationwartime rape in the Sierra Leone civil war
LanguageENG
AuthorCohen, Dara Kay
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Much of the current scholarship on wartime violence, including studies of the combatants themselves, assumes that women are victims and men are perpetrators. However, there is an increasing awareness that women in armed groups may be active fighters who function as more than just cooks, cleaners, and sexual slaves. In this article, the author focuses on the involvement of female fighters in a form of violence that is commonly thought to be perpetrated only by men: the wartime rape of noncombatants. Using original interviews with ex-combatants and newly available survey data, she finds that in the Sierra Leone civil war, female combatants were participants in the widespread conflict-related violence, including gang rape. A growing body of evidence from other conflicts suggests that Sierra Leone is not an anomaly and that women likely engage in conflict-related violence, including sexual violence, more often than is currently believed. Many standard interpretations of wartime rape are undermined by the participation of female perpetrators. To explain the involvement of women in wartime rape, the author argues that women in armed group units face similar pressure to that faced by their male counterparts to participate in gang rape. The study has broad implications for future avenues of research on wartime violence, as well as for policy.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Politics Vol. 65, No.3; Jul 2013: p.383-415
Journal SourceWorld Politics Vol. 65, No.3; Jul 2013: p.383-415
Key WordsWartime Violence ;  Women ;  Armed Groups ;  Female Fighters ;  Sierra Leone Civil War ;  Sierra Leone ;  Female Combatants ;  Wartime Rape