Acknowledgments
Editors and Contributors Biographies
Forewords
Introduction
I. Background and Context
1. Theories of War
Laura Sjoberg
2. From Women and War to Gender and Conflict? Feminist
Trajectories
Dubravka Zarkov
3. The Silences in the Rules that Regulate Women during Times of
Armed Conflict
Judith Gardam
4. How Should we Explain the Recurrence of Violent Conflict, and
What Might Gender Have to do with it?
Judy El-Bushra
5. The Gendered Nexus Between Conflict and Citizenship in
Historical Perspective
Jo Butterfield and Elizabeth Heineman
6. Violent Conflict and Changes in Gender Economic Roles:
Implications for Post-Conflict Economic Recovery
Patricia Justino
7. Men As Victims
Chris Dolan
II. The Security Council's WPS Agenda/Contemporary Survey
8. Women, Peace and Security: A Critical Analysis of the Security
Council's Vision
Dianne Otto
9. Participation and Protection: Security Council Dynamics,
Bureaucratic Politics and the Evolution of the Women, Peace and
Security Agenda
Anne Marie Goetz and Rob Jenkins
10. A Critical Genealogy of the Centrality of Sexual Violence to
Gender and Conflict
Karen Engle
11. 1325 +15 = Reflections on the Women, Peace and Security
Agenda
Kimberly Theidon
12. Complemenentarity and Convergence? Women, Peace and Security
and the Counterterrorism Agenda
Naureen Chowdhury Fink and Alison Davidian
13. Convergence Between CEDAW and Security Council Resolution 1325:
Unlocking the Potential of CEDAW as an Important Accountability
Tool for the Women, Peace and Security Agenda
Pramilla Patten
14. Indicators and Benchmarks
Pablo Castillo-Diaz and Hanny Cueva-Beteta
III. Legal and Political Elements
15. Humanitarian Intervention and Gender Dynamics
Gina Heathcote
16. (Re)Considering the Gender Jurisprudence of Conflict
Patricia Viseur Sellers
17. Complementarity as a Catalyst for Gender Justice in National
Prosecutions
Amrita Kapur
18. Forced Marriage During Conflict and Mass Atrocity
Valerie Oosterveld
19. Advancing Justice and Making Amends through Reparations - Legal
and Operational Considerations
Kristin Kalla
20. Colonialism
Amina Mama
21. Conflict, Displacement and Refugees
Lucy Hovil
22. Gender and Forms of Conflict; The Moral Hazards of Dating the
Security Council
Vasuki Nesiah
IV. Conflict and Post-Conflict Space
23. The Martial Rape of Girls and Women in Antiquity and
Modernity
Kathy L. Gaca
24. "Mind the Gap:" Measuring and Understanding Gendered Conflict
Experiences
Amelia Hoover Green
25. Intersectionality: Working in Conflict
Eilish Rooney
26. Agency and Gender Norms in War Economies
Patti Petesch
27. Risk and Resilience: The Physical and Mental Health of Female
Civilians During War
Lauren C. Ng and Theresa S. Betancourt
28. The Gender Implications of Small Arms and Light Weapons in
Conflict Situations
Barbara Frey
29. Unmanned Weapons: Looking for the Gender Dimension
Christof Heyns and Tess Borden
30. Gender and Peacekeeping
Sabrina Karim and Marsha Henry
31. Peacekeeping, Human Trafficking, and Sexual Abuse and
Exploitation
Martina Vandenberg
32. Women, Peace Negotiations and Peace Agreements: Opportunities
and Challenges
Christine Bell
33. Women's Organizations and Peace Initiatives
Aili Mari Tripp
34. Gender and Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration:
Reviewing and Advancing the Field
Dyan Mazurana, Roxanne Krystalli and Anton Baaré
35. Decolonial feminism, gender and transitional justice
Pascha Bueno-Hansen
36. Gender and Governance in post-conflict and democratizing
settings
Lisa Kindervater and Sheila Meintjes
V. Case Studies
37. Who Defines the Red Lines? The Prospects for Safeguarding
Women's Rights and Securing their Future in Post-Transition
Afghanistan
Sari Kouvo and Corey Levine
38. "That's Not my Daughter": The Paradoxes of Documenting Jihadist
Mass Rape in 1990's Algeria and Beyond
Karima Bennoune
39. Consequences of Conflict Related Sexual Violence on
Post-Conflict Society: Case Study of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Lejla Hadzimesic
40. Colombia: Gender and Land Restitution
Donny Meertens
41. Knowing Gender and/in Armed Conflict?: Reflections from
Research in the DRC
Maria Eriksson Baaz and Maria Stern
42. Northern Ireland: The Significance of A Bottom Up Women's
Movement in a Politically Contested Society
Monica McWilliams and Avila Kilmurray
43. Gendered Suffering and the Eviction of the Native: The Politics
of Birth in Occupied East Jerusalem
Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian
44. Rwanda: Women's Political Participation in Post-Conflict
State-Building
Doris Buss and Jerusa Ali
45. Sri Lanka: The Impact of Militarization on Women
Ambika Satkunanathan
Professor Fionnuala Ní Aoláin holds both the Regents Professorship
at the University of Minnesota, and Robina Chair in Law, Public
Policy and Society at the University of Minnesota Law School and is
Professor of Law at the University of Ulster's Transitional Justice
Institute in Belfast, Northern Ireland. In 2003, she was appointed
by the Secretary-General of the United Nations as Special Expert on
promoting gender equality in times
of conflict and peace-making. In 2011, she completed a Study on
Reparations for Conflict Related Sexual Violence for the OHCHR and
UN WOMEN. She has served as an Expert Consultant for the
International Criminal Court and the
Council of Europe. Her book Law in Times of Crisis was awarded the
American Society of International Law's preeminent prize in 2007 -
the Certificate of Merit for creative scholarship.
Naomi Cahn is Justice Anthony M. Kennedy Distinguished Professor of
Law and Nancy L. Buc '69 Research Professor in Democracy and Equity
at University of Virginia School of Law. She has written numerous
law review articles and books in the areas of family law,
international law, and domestic violence, including On the
Frontlines: Gender, War, and the Post-Conflict Process (co-authored
with Professors Fionnuala Ní Aoláin and Dina Haynes (OUP 2011)).
Professor Cahn has
been a long-time member of the Executive Committee of the Women in
International Law Interest Group (WILIG) of the American Society of
International Law. From 2002 to 2004, Professor Cahn was on leave
in Kinshasa, Congo where
she worked on issues concerning international criminal justice and
sexual violence.
Dina Francesca Haynes is Professor of Law at New England Law |
Boston, where she teaches immigration, refugee and asylum law,
human trafficking and Constitutional law. She has taught at
Georgetown University Law Center and American University's
Washington College of Law. Prior to teaching law, she spent a
decade practicing international law within international
organizations (Director General of the Human Rights Department for
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
in
Bosnia-Herzegovina, Human Rights Advisor to the OSCE in Serbia and
Montenegro, Protection Officer with the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees) and has received assignments with the UN
High
Commissioner for Human Rights. Professor Haynes was also an
attorney for the United States Department of Justice and clerked on
the Constitutional Court of South Africa. She researches, writes,
and engages in policy work and legal advocacy in the areas of human
trafficking, international organizations, post-conflict
reconstruction, human rights law, immigration, refugee law and
migration.
Nahla Valji is the Senior Gender Adviser in the United Nations'
Executive Office of the Secretary-General. Prior to this she was
the Acting Chief/ Deputy Chief of the Peace and Security section in
UN Women's headquarters in New York, where she led f the
organization's work on peacekeeping, peace negotiations,
transitional justice, and rule of law, involving both global
programming and policy work, particularly with regards to the
Security Council. She headed the Secretariat for the Global
Study
on implementation of resolution 1325, a comprehensive study
requested by the Security Council for the 15-year review of women,
peace and security and was the founder and editor of the
International
Journal of Transitional Justice published by Oxford University
Press. Prior to joining the UN, Nahla worked in South Africa, where
she led the regional transitional justice work of the Centre for
the Study of Violence and Reconciliation and managed the African
Transitional Justice Research Network.
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