In recent years, legal commentators have begun to write on women in war: usually as the civilian victims of belligerent forces, sometimes as military victims of discrimination within their own armed forces. Very little has been written about women as belligerents. What has been written does not focus on the legal problems conventional forces face when women are unprivileged belligerents \u27 who fail to comply with law of war requirements for combatant status. These problems can become acute when conventional forces are engaged in Small Wars where unarmed women often serve as auxiliaries to their unconventional opponents. Although legal sources have been remarkably silent about these problems, a number of examples are available. I have s...
In war or other armed conflicts, generally women are categorized as vulnerable people. Sexual violen...
Women increasingly bear the major burden of armed conflict. In recent years particular attention has...
Armed conflict and occupation are by definition necessarily violent for all participants, be they ci...
In recent years, legal commentators have begun to write on women in war: usually as the civilian vic...
© 2005 T.M.C. Asser Instituut and ContributorsThe impact of armed conflict on women is the subject o...
The aim of this article is to extend the critique of human rights law by feminist scholars to humani...
The construction of social sex and gender roles means that armed conflict is sexed and gendered. Men...
This article proposes an engaged analysis of the impact that armed conflicts have on women and the d...
International humanitarian law [IHL] provisions address the situation of civilian women caught in ar...
Women have always contributed to conflict dynamics, both through their active support to armed group...
The following work shall critique the bodies of the laws of armed conflict and international crimina...
Since the end of the Cold War, a number of regional conflicts worldwide have devastated innocent pop...
Throughout history, women have suffered most from armed conflicts in different forms. Thus, humanita...
The protection of women during armed conflicts has from time to time been a matter of concern to the...
Historically, the rape of women in war has drawn occasional and short lived international attention....
In war or other armed conflicts, generally women are categorized as vulnerable people. Sexual violen...
Women increasingly bear the major burden of armed conflict. In recent years particular attention has...
Armed conflict and occupation are by definition necessarily violent for all participants, be they ci...
In recent years, legal commentators have begun to write on women in war: usually as the civilian vic...
© 2005 T.M.C. Asser Instituut and ContributorsThe impact of armed conflict on women is the subject o...
The aim of this article is to extend the critique of human rights law by feminist scholars to humani...
The construction of social sex and gender roles means that armed conflict is sexed and gendered. Men...
This article proposes an engaged analysis of the impact that armed conflicts have on women and the d...
International humanitarian law [IHL] provisions address the situation of civilian women caught in ar...
Women have always contributed to conflict dynamics, both through their active support to armed group...
The following work shall critique the bodies of the laws of armed conflict and international crimina...
Since the end of the Cold War, a number of regional conflicts worldwide have devastated innocent pop...
Throughout history, women have suffered most from armed conflicts in different forms. Thus, humanita...
The protection of women during armed conflicts has from time to time been a matter of concern to the...
Historically, the rape of women in war has drawn occasional and short lived international attention....
In war or other armed conflicts, generally women are categorized as vulnerable people. Sexual violen...
Women increasingly bear the major burden of armed conflict. In recent years particular attention has...
Armed conflict and occupation are by definition necessarily violent for all participants, be they ci...