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Search: AMNE:(SOCIAL SCIENCES Sociology) > The Nordic Africa Institute > Uppsala University

  • Result 1-10 of 81
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1.
  • Eriksson Baaz, Maria, 1971-, et al. (author)
  • The Complexity of Violence : A critical analysis of sexual violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
  • 2010
  • Reports (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • This report, the first in Sida’s gender-based violence series, draws on an original case study, including extensive interviews with members of thearmed forces in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). By critically exploring and convincingly challenging existing stereotypes and narratives about sexual violence in conflict settings, the authors reveal the need for a nuanced understanding of SGBV, including its invisible victims. Their analysis transcends reductionist explanations that separate SGBV from other forms of violence that afflict war-torn societies, and haunt post-war contexts. They thus provide invaluable insights into the complex circumstances in which SGBV occurs.
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  • Beyond ”Gender and Stir” : Reflections on gender and SSR in the aftermath of African conflicts
  • 2012
  • Editorial collection (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • As a policy field largely characterised by handbooks and manuals, gender and Security Sector Reform (SSR) has been insufficiently studied and analysed. Analytical discussion of what gendering SSRmeans is quite rare, as is the study of the already gendered nature of the security institutions that are the subject of intervention. This policy dialogue unpacks aspects of the discourses and practices regarding gender and SSR. It highlights limitations and problems both in the conceptualisation of gender and its incorporation into practical SSR work. The publication also demonstrates how researchers and policymakers often have divergent views of what gendering SSR means. Finally, it calls for closer and more constructive dialogue between researchers and practitioners, a dialogue which acknowledges the conditions and constraints in these two spheres of work.
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4.
  • Coulter, Chris, et al. (author)
  • Young female fighters in African wars : conflict and its consequences
  • 2008
  • Reports (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • In the numerous armed conflicts that are tearing the African continent apart, young women are participants and carry guns alongside their male comrades-in-arms. Challenging the stereotype of women in African wars as victims only, this issue of the Nordic Africa Institute Policy Dialogues shows how in modern African wars women have often been as active as men. Female fighters are victimized, yet they are not mere victims. Girls and young women who volunteer to fight often possess quite considerable strength and independence. Programmes for disarming, demobilizing, and reintegrating former fighters must be based on better understanding of the range of women's roles and experiences in war and post-war settings in order to act in a gender-sensitive way and to empower this group of women in the aftermath of war.
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5.
  • Coulter, Chris, et al. (author)
  • Young women in African wars
  • 2007
  • Reports (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Young women are combatants in contemporary African wars. They also participate in a whole array of different roles. However, by and large, they remain invisible to us. In fact, our “northern” hackneyed views on women’s innate non-participation in war prevent us from seeing specific needs for young women during and in the aftermath of wars. For instance, disarmament, demobilization and reintegration programmes often fail to address appropriate needs for young women and in a variety of ways “prevent” them from partaking. Issues of stigma, safe demobilisation, individual concerns for post-war marriage, health and education, need to be addresed in both a more gendered way, but also with an apposite understanding of young women’s agency in both peace and war. In this Policy note it is argued that to improve policy and programming efforts it is necessary to broaden the understanding of young women’s roles and participation in armed conflict in Africa historically and today.
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6.
  • Rudén, Fanny, et al. (author)
  • Sexual exploitation and abuse by peacekeeping operations in contemporary Africa
  • 2009
  • Reports (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • In international peacekeeping operations (PKOs) some individuals are involved in sexual exploitation and abuse of the host country’s population, buying of sexual services and trafficking of prostitutes. Far from being a new phenomenon it goes back a long time, and reports on the issue have increased over the years. All too frequently we read about peacekeepers visiting prostitutes, committing rape, or in other ways sexually exploiting host populations. Some peacekeepers are taking advantage of the power their work gives them, and becoming abusers rather than protectors in situations where the host population is powerless and in dire need of protection. Peacekeepers’ abuse of their mandate is inflicting severe damage on host societies and often results in a number of unintended consequences such as human rights violations, rapid spread of HIV, decreased trust in the UN as well as other international aid agencies, and harmful changes to gender patterns. Women and children, both girls and boys, are especially exposed. Having already suffered from war and instability they risk becoming even more physically and mentally wounded. Peacekeeping operations risk doing more harm than good in African war zones, and if they cannot learn from previous mistakes maybe they ought to stay at home. We do not argue for the latter; rather, we point towards the urgent need to change explicit and implicit patterns and habits in international peacekeeping operations in relation to sexual exploitation and abuse (SEA) in Africa. In this Policy Note we focus predominantly on military staff, but acknowledge that the civilian staff of PKOs, and international aid workers, are also implicated. On the other hand it should initially be pointed out that most PKO staff are not sexual exploiters and abusers.
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7.
  • Utas, Mats (author)
  • Urban youth and post-conflict Africa : On policy priorities
  • 2012
  • Reports (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Youth in urban areas of post-war African countries lead lives that are not very different from non-post-war societies. In fact it is often hard to separate battle-hardened ex-combatants from street-hardened urban youth in general. In this context, youth is a social category of people living in volatile and dire life conditions rather than a group defined by age. It is people who are no longer children, but who have yet to become social adults, people who have been marginalized into what they see as a chronic state of youthhood. It is the number of social youth, not the number of an age-categorized “youth bulge”, that poses a danger for stability in many African countries. This way of defining youth demands special efforts and raises special concerns when international donor communities create and implement youth-specific projects in post-conflict areas. Related to that, this policy note reflects on number of issues that will help improve the results of such projects through knowing and using existing social structures, including gender relations, the problems of social elites and the advantages of utilizing already existing systems of labor training.
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8.
  • Eriksson Baaz, Maria, 1971, et al. (author)
  • Fearless Fighters and Submissive Wives: Negotiating Identity among Women Soldiers in the Congo (DRC)
  • 2013
  • In: Armed forces and society. - 0095-327X .- 1556-0848. ; 39:4, s. 711-739
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • This article addresses an underreported aspect of contemporary warring in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC): the experiences of women soldiers and officers in the Congolese national armed forces (Forces Armées de la République Démocratique du Congo [FARDC]). It thus addresses an empirical gap in scholarly and policy knowledge about female soldiers in national armies on the African continent, and the DRC in particular. Based on original interviews, the article explores the way female soldiers in the FARDC understand their identities as “women soldiers” and offers new insight into women soldiers’ role and responsibilities in the widespread violence committed against civilians in the DRC. Moreover, it explores how their understanding of themselves as “women soldiers” both challenges and confirms familiar notions of the army as a masculine sphere. Such insight is important for better understanding the gendered makeup of the military and for contributing to a knowledge base for Security Sector Reform in this violent (post)conflict setting.
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  • Result 1-10 of 81
Type of publication
journal article (40)
reports (11)
book chapter (11)
other publication (8)
editorial collection (6)
review (3)
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book (1)
doctoral thesis (1)
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Type of content
peer-reviewed (30)
other academic/artistic (27)
pop. science, debate, etc. (24)
Author/Editor
Utas, Mats (45)
Utas, Mats, 1968- (21)
Trovalla, Ulrika, 19 ... (6)
Eriksson Baaz, Maria ... (5)
Lindell, Ilda (3)
Bjarnesen, Jesper, 1 ... (3)
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Bøås, Morten (3)
Trovalla, Erik (3)
Themnér, Anders (2)
Stern, Maria, 1966 (2)
Eriksson Baaz, Maria (2)
Christiansen, Catrin ... (2)
Coulter, Chris (2)
Persson, Mariam (2)
Käihkö, Ilmari (2)
Lindberg, Emy, 1985- (2)
Arnfred, Signe (1)
Adolfo, Eldridge Vig ... (1)
Söderberg Kovacs, Mi ... (1)
Nyström, Daniel (1)
Havnevik, Kjell (1)
Cheru, Fantu (1)
Therborn, Göran (1)
Palmberg, Mai (1)
Obi, Cyril I. (1)
Hagberg, Sten, Profe ... (1)
Vigh, Henrik (1)
Hammar, Amanda (1)
Kamete, Amin Y. (1)
Myhre, Knut Christia ... (1)
Ngangjoh Hodu, Yenko ... (1)
Oinas, Elina (1)
Thorsen, Dorte (1)
Utas, Mats, Dr. (1)
Hellweg, Joseph, Dr. (1)
Christensen, Maya (1)
Verweijen, Judith (1)
Gondola, Didier (1)
Marijnen, Esther (1)
Eriksson, Mikael, 19 ... (1)
James, Brian (1)
Vigh, Henrik E. (1)
Rudén, Fanny (1)
Soiri, Iina (1)
Trovalla, Ulrika (1)
Christensen, Maya M. (1)
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University
University of Gothenburg (6)
Swedish National Defence College (4)
Stockholm University (1)
Language
English (64)
Swedish (9)
German (4)
Danish (1)
Norwegian (1)
Finnish (1)
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Japanese (1)
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Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Social Sciences (81)
Humanities (34)

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