Since the 1990s, sexual violence in conflict zones
has received much media attention. In large part as a
result of grassroots feminist organizing in the 1970s
and 1980s, mass rapes in the wars in the former
Yugoslavia and during the Rwandan genocide received
widespread coverage, and international
organizations-from courts to NGOs to the UN-have engaged
in systematic efforts to hold perpetrators accountable
and to ameliorate the effects of wartime sexual
violence. Yet many millennia of conflict preceded these
developments, and we know little about the longer-term
history of conflict-based sexual violence. Sexual
Violence in Conflict Zones helps to fill in the
historical gaps. It provides insight into subjects that
are of deep concern to the human rights community, such
as the aftermath of conflict-based sexual violence,
legal strategies for prosecuting it, the economic
functions of sexual violence, and the ways perceived
religious or racial difference can create or aggravate
settings of sexual danger. Essays in the volume span a
broad geographic, chronological, and thematic scope,
touching on the ancient world, medieval Europe, the
American Revolutionary War, precolonial and colonial
Africa, Muslim Central Asia, the two world wars, and the
Bangladeshi War of Independence. By considering a wide
variety of cases, the contributors analyze the factors
making sexual violence in conflict zones more or less
likely and the resulting trauma more or less
devastating. Topics covered range from the experiences
of victims and the motivations of perpetrators, to the
relationship between wartime and peacetime sexual
violence, to the historical background of the
contemporary feminist-inflected human rights moment. In
bringing together historical and contemporary
perspectives, this wide-ranging collection provides
historians and human rights activists with tools for
understanding long-term consequences of sexual violence
as war-ravaged societies struggle to achieve
postconflict stability.
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