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ISRAELSEN, SHELLI (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   172496


Why Now? Timing Rebel Recruitment of Female Combatants / Israelsen, Shelli   Journal Article
Israelsen, Shelli Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Using case study evidence, this article demonstrates how the relationship between conflict intensity, gender inclusive ideologies and gender inclusive policies on one hand, and the decision to recruit female combatants on the other hand, is conditioned by the groups' conflict phase. Conflict phases divide conflict events into two distinct parts, the guerrilla activity phase and the civil war phase, contingent on the insurgents' number of armed fighters, military capabilities, level of institutionalization and degree of territorial control. These conflict phases affect the recruitment behavior of insurgent groups making them more likely to recruit female combatants in the civil war phase and less likely to do so in the guerrilla activity phase.
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2
ID:   162254


Women in Charge: The Effect of Rebel Governance and Women’s Organisations on Karen Women’s Political Participation / Israelsen, Shelli   Journal Article
Israelsen, Shelli Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract What factors affect women’s political participation in wartime? Previous scholarship has found several benefits associated with women’s participation in the peace process and in post-conflict society. However, little is known about what drives women’s political participation during or after civil war. This article addresses the former and examines two factors – the type of civilian governance structure and the degree of autonomy of women’s groups – to determine their effect on women’s participation in communities experiencing conflict. Drawing on fieldwork in Thailand and Burma/Myanmar, this article uses the conflict between the Burmese government and the Karen National Union to explore this relationship.
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