Non-State Armed Groups

Growing up in Guerrilla Camps: The Long-Term Impact of Being a Child Soldier in El Salvador’s Civil War

Citation:

Dickson-Gómez, Julia. 2002. “Growing up in Guerrilla Camps: The Long-Term Impact of Being a Child Soldier in El Salvador’s Civil War.” Ethos 30 (4): 327–56.

Author: Julia Dickson-Gómez

Abstract:

Many recent wars are characterized by high levels of civilian casualties, a large proportion of whom are women and children. Furthermore, an estimated 300,000 children are actively participating in 36 ongoing or recently ended conflicts around the world. However, there is a dearth of reseearch on the long-term effects of war trauma experienced in childhood or children's active participation in armed conflicts. This article explores the long-term effectives of children's active participation in the war in El Salvador by examining four young adults who fought with the guerrilla army as children and adolescents. Comparing these four cases with member of the community who joined and fought with the guerrilla as adults, it will be argued that traumatic experiences were even more devestating when they occurred in early childhood as they destroyed the ability to establish basic trust in competent and nurturing caretakers. Becoming a soldier created additional conflicts as these adolescent soldiers behaved in ways they felt were morally incorrect. Adolescent soldiers were also not given the opportunity to develop autonomy and learn adult peace-time roles. Both the psychological trauma suffered as children as well as continued economic scarcity and violence contribute to these campesinos' difficulties in creating meaningful lives as adults.

Topics: Age, Youth, Armed Conflict, Civil Wars, Combatants, Child Soldiers, Gender, Girls, Boys, Health, Mental Health, Trauma, Military Forces & Armed Groups, Non-State Armed Groups Regions: Americas, Central America Countries: El Salvador

Year: 2002

Girls with Guns: Narrating the Experience of War of Frelimo’s ‘Female Detachment'

Citation:

West, Harry G. 2000. “Girls with Guns: Narrating the Experience of War of Frelimo’s ‘Female Detachment.’” Anthropological Quarterly 73 (4): 180-94.

Author: Harry G. West

Abstract:

This article examines the way in which female guerrillas both appropriated and contributed to the FRELIMO narrative of women's participation in the struggle for Mozambican liberation. The author argues that ideological commitment to the cause was essential to defining the experience of violence for these girls and young women and that, concurrent with their convictions, they felt empowered rather than victimized by the war. The article contributes to an emerging literature suggesting that the culturally-specific meanings given to the social category of youth as well as to experiences of violence are essential to understanding the impact upon Africa's youth of the continent's many armed conflicts.

Keywords: child soldiers, violence, guerrilla war, women's emancipation, ideology, narrative

Topics: Age, Youth, Armed Conflict, National Liberation Wars, Combatants, Child Soldiers, Female Combatants, Gender, Girls, Military Forces & Armed Groups, Non-State Armed Groups, Rights, Women's Rights Regions: Africa, Southern Africa Countries: Mozambique

Year: 2000

Women in Revolutionary Movements: Changing Patterns of Latin American Guerilla Struggle

Citation:

Lobao, Linda. 1990. “Women in Revolutionary Movements: Changing Patterns of Latin American Guerilla Struggle.” Dialectical Anthropology 15 (2-3): 211-32.

Author: Linda Lobao

Topics: Armed Conflict, Combatants, Female Combatants, Gender, Women, Military Forces & Armed Groups, Non-State Armed Groups Regions: Americas, Central America

Year: 1990

Collective and Individual Identities: Experiences of Recruitment and Reintegration of Female ExCombatants of the Tigrean People’s Liberation Army, Ethiopia

Citation:

Veale, Angela. 2005. “Collective and Individual Identities: Experiences of Recruitment and Reintegration of Female ExCombatants of the Tigrean People’s Liberation Army, Ethiopia.” In Invisible Stakeholders: Children and War in Africa, edited by A. McIntyre, 105-27. Pretoria: Institute for Security Studies.

Author: Angela Veale

Topics: Combatants, Female Combatants, Gender, Women, Military Forces & Armed Groups, Non-State Armed Groups Regions: Africa, East Africa Countries: Ethiopia

Year: 2005

The Female Terrorist: A Socio-Psychological Perspective

Citation:

Galvin, Deborah M. 1983. “The Female Terrorist: A Socio-Psychological Perspective.” Behavioral Sciences and the Law 1 (2): 19-32.

Author: Deborah M. Galvin

Abstract:

This article deals with the female terrorist, her socio-psychological characteristics, and her role within the terrorist organization. There is no archetypal female terrorist; her description is varied from her physique to her role within the organization to her psychological make-up. Women take up terrorism either by their own initiative or through a secondary other, most often introduced into it by a male. Although women terrorists have the equality to fight or die by the side of their male counterparts, their power position frequently is less than that of the male. The female's sexuality plays an important role in the group dynamics and does alter the nature of terrorism itself. The article explore the implications of these findings for the future of terrorism and the participation of women.

Topics: Combatants, Female Combatants, Gender, Women, Gendered Power Relations, Military Forces & Armed Groups, Non-State Armed Groups, Terrorism

Year: 1983

Gendered Transitional Justice and the Non-State Actor

Citation:

Ní Aoláin, Fionnuala, and Catherine O’Rourke. 2010. “Gendered Transitional Justice and the Non-State Actor.” In Contested Transitions: Dilemmas of Transitional Justice in Colombia and Comparative Experience, edited by M. Reed and A. Lyons, 115-43. Bogota: International Center for Transitional Justice.

Authors: Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, Catherine O’Rourke

Abstract:

This essay starts from the premise that feminist contributions to shaping the field and scope of transitional justice have had a significant effect on broadening and redefining the field. Intervention designed to activate international accountability and to deepen domestic criminalization of sexual violence have been a priority and have had some success. In addition, exploration of the relationship between truth-telling and gender, amnesty and gender, as well as the relationship between gender and peacemaking, were also high on the feminist agenda. More recently, efforts to engender reparations programmes have brought light and heat to a range of harms experienced by women. There is increasing feminist attention to the category of socioeconomic harms, and their disproportionate impact on women. However, we argue that by contrast to feminist efforts to broaden transitional justice's frame, feminist interventions have assumed a remarkably narrow set of actors and institutions of responsibility. The legal devices common to transitional justice landscape - amnesty, truth recovery, international criminal justice, reconstruction, rule of law reform, security sector reform, and reparations - posit the state as the site and conduit of transition. In this typology, transitional justice is a process by which the state is rendered coherent and legitimate. Throughout, feminist interventions in the field of transitional justice tend to assume the state. By this we mean that the state is seen as the locus for reform, and the entity that is most capable of and necessary to delivering transformation for women. As a result, advocacy for tougher measures of individual criminal accountability for sexual violence, gender analysis in truth commissions, policy prescriptions for reparations programmes, and advocacy for prioritizing an end to gender harms in security sector reform, are all interventions that assume the necessity of the state and its related institutional components. We argue that this singular focus on the state can obscure a range of other important actors relevant to securing transition and may overestimate the extent to which the state is capable of delivering on feminist expectations. To advance our analysis we focus on the Colombian context, assessing in particular the extent to which gendered violence committed by non-state actors can be satisfactorily be accommodated within current state oriented framework. We offer some alternatives to the state-only focus with a particular focus on the contribution of international humanitarian law for the accountability of violations committed by non-state actors.

Topics: Gender, Women, Justice, Transitional Justice, Military Forces & Armed Groups, Non-State Armed Groups Regions: Americas, South America Countries: Colombia

Year: 2010

Woman, Violence, Nation: Representations of Female Insurgency in Fiction and Public Discourse in the 1970s and 1980s

Citation:

Becker, Bettina T. 2000. "Woman, Violence, Nation: Representations of Female Insurgency in Fiction and Public Discourse in the 1970s and 1980s." Women in German Yearbook 16: 207-20.

Author: Bettina T. Becker

Abstract:

Germany in the 1970s was subject to a wave of terrorist activities in which women such as Ulrike Meinhof and Gudrun Ensslin played a significant role. The mass media and public discourse in general struggled with women's participation in these cases of extreme physical violence. In this article, I explore the articulations of the discourses of gender, nation, and violence in the German news magazine Der Spiegel, Ulrike Meinhof's tele vision play Bambule, and Traude Buhrmann's Flage fiber Moabiter Mauern (Flights over Moabit's Walls), in order to illuminate representations of female insurgency. My argument centers around their different uses of deviance and the changing character of social criticism in the 1970s and 1980s.

 

Topics: Combatants, Female Combatants, Gender, Women, Gender Roles, Media, Military Forces & Armed Groups, Non-State Armed Groups, Nationalism, Terrorism, Sexuality, Violence

Year: 2000

Lions, Tigers, and Freedom Birds: How and Why the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam Employs Women

Citation:

Stack-O’Connor, Alisa. 2007. “Lions, Tigers, and Freedom Birds: How and Why the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam Employs Women.” Terrorism and Political Violence 19 (1): 43-63. doi:10.1080/09546550601054642.

Author: Alisa Stack-O’Connor

Abstract:

This article examines how and why the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) integrated women, highlighting themes common to women's participation in militant groups such as women's unique propaganda value and cultural limits on recruiting women and employing them in political violence.

Keywords: Gender, Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, LTTE, sex, Tamil Tigers, women

Topics: Combatants, Female Combatants, Gender, Women, Military Forces & Armed Groups, Non-State Armed Groups Regions: Asia, South Asia Countries: Sri Lanka

Year: 2007

Girls as “Weapons of Terror” in Northern Uganda and Sierra Leonean Rebel Fighting Forces

Citation:

McKay, Susan. 2005. "Girls as 'Weapons of Terror' in Northern Uganda and Sierra Leonean Rebel Fighting Forces." Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 28 (5): 385-97. 

Author: Susan McKay

Abstract:

Girls—both willingly and unwillingly—participate in terrorist acts within the context of contemporary wars. These acts range from targeting civilians for torture and killing to destroying community infrastructures so that people's physical and psychological health and survival are affected. Girls witness or participate in acts such as mutilation, human sacrifice, forced cannibalism, drug use, and physical and psychological deprivation. This article focuses upon girls in two fighting forces: the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) in Northern Uganda and the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) in Sierra Leone and their roles as combatants whose primary strategy is perpetrating terrorist acts against civilians. In analyses of gender and terrorism, girls are typically subsumed under the larger category of female, which marginalizes their experiences and fails to recognize that they possess agency and power.

Topics: Armed Conflict, Combatants, Female Combatants, Gender, Girls, Military Forces & Armed Groups, Non-State Armed Groups, Terrorism, Weapons /Arms Regions: Africa, East Africa, West Africa Countries: Sierra Leone, Uganda

Year: 2005

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