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Reshaping How Political Settlements Engage with Conflict-Related Violence Against Women
2019
The exceptionalism attributed to acts of sexualised violence in war has reinforced the idea that what happens in war is different from that occurring outside of war. This counters long-standing feminist scholarship which has argued that violence against women (VAW) in conflict is a reflection of the everyday, mundane ways that women experience violence in their everyday lives. The paper presents a new 'pre, during- and post-conflict framework' to map, on the basis of theory and empirics, the
doi:10.22024/unikent/03/fal.835
fatcat:kdvea63fg5g4rkhec7ekzv7xty