The media response to the mass rape of women in Former Yugoslavia, and the subsequent setting up of the International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia, have had a massive impact on the way in which these rapes have been represented, researched and analysed. The early conclusion that the rapes were part of a genocide, perpetrated by Serbs against Muslims, led to a demand for physical evidence to prove that the rapes were taking place, that they were systematic and were ethnically driven. The result has been an overarching emphasis on evidence that has dominated the description, analysis and theorizing of the rapes and has led to the marginalizing and silencing of a range of voices, particularly of those working with survivor communiti...
This study has set out to investigate the legacy of post-genocide judicial institutions mandated to ...
One of the most significant social, political, and legal developments in contemporary international ...
In this article I will firstly argue that genocide and wars are gendered but also often feminised vi...
This paper explores the practice and the political context of war rapes in the former Yugoslavia (19...
In this work, I examine the use of rape as a war tool during the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s in the F...
Studies of memory, genocide, sexual violence in war, and women’s history are all relatively new fiel...
This article focuses on the nexus between wartime sexual violence and genocide in relation to the 19...
When describing sexual violence as a ’weapon of war’ or as systematic in the setting of a conflict, ...
Alexandra Stiglmayer interviewed survivors of the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina in order to reveal, to a...
Genocide and Gender in the Twentieth Century brings together a collection of some of the finest Geno...
In the conflict in Bosnia-Herzegovina, one of the critical elements of the ethnic cleansing regimes ...
This paper investigates if the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia has been ef...
Genocide and Gender in the Twentieth Century brings together a collection of some of the finest geno...
In the last twenty years, a gendered approach to the study of genocides has renewed the field's ques...
This article addresses the implications of recent gender research for the definition of the crime of...
This study has set out to investigate the legacy of post-genocide judicial institutions mandated to ...
One of the most significant social, political, and legal developments in contemporary international ...
In this article I will firstly argue that genocide and wars are gendered but also often feminised vi...
This paper explores the practice and the political context of war rapes in the former Yugoslavia (19...
In this work, I examine the use of rape as a war tool during the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s in the F...
Studies of memory, genocide, sexual violence in war, and women’s history are all relatively new fiel...
This article focuses on the nexus between wartime sexual violence and genocide in relation to the 19...
When describing sexual violence as a ’weapon of war’ or as systematic in the setting of a conflict, ...
Alexandra Stiglmayer interviewed survivors of the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina in order to reveal, to a...
Genocide and Gender in the Twentieth Century brings together a collection of some of the finest Geno...
In the conflict in Bosnia-Herzegovina, one of the critical elements of the ethnic cleansing regimes ...
This paper investigates if the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia has been ef...
Genocide and Gender in the Twentieth Century brings together a collection of some of the finest geno...
In the last twenty years, a gendered approach to the study of genocides has renewed the field's ques...
This article addresses the implications of recent gender research for the definition of the crime of...
This study has set out to investigate the legacy of post-genocide judicial institutions mandated to ...
One of the most significant social, political, and legal developments in contemporary international ...
In this article I will firstly argue that genocide and wars are gendered but also often feminised vi...