This article examines women's role as combatants in national liberation forces in South Africa. Three categories – guerrilla girls, combative mothers and the in-betweeners – are introduced to underscore the varied ways in which women have participated in combat within the national liberation movements. Factors such as age and one's ability to leave the country affected whether women could participate in combat as ‘guerrilla girls’ or if it limited them to fighting apartheid violence from home, or if there were women who can be defined as having fallen somewhere in between these categories. These categories are used to theorise women's combat roles in the anti-apartheid struggle, thus broadening and challenging the dominant notions of combat...
As South Africa’s struggle against apartheid entered its final, turbulent decade, African students a...
This study examines the struggles of South African women from the beginning of the Union of South Af...
We investigate the potential relationship between female combatants and conflict duration. We conten...
This article examines women's role as combatants in national liberation forces in South Africa. Thre...
This article focuses on female combatants serving in armed conflicts in Africa, South America, and A...
This study examines the state assisted demobilisation and civilian reintegration of women excombatan...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routle...
Women have always contributed to conflict dynamics, both through their active support to armed group...
Siphokazi Magadla's Guerrillas and Combative Mothers rests on 40 life histories of women w...
In the numerous armed conflicts that are tearing the African continent apart, young women are partic...
Bibliography: leaves 290-311.xiii, 354, 14 leaves : ill. (chiefly col.) ; 30 cm.This study investiga...
This is the published version. Copyright 2015 University of Chicago PressThe article discusses effor...
An analysis of gendered fighter constructions in the liberation movements in Eritrea and southern Su...
Research into conflicts in Africa has demonstrated the numerous ways in which war can be disempoweri...
This article examines the extent to which the participation of women in the military furthers or hin...
As South Africa’s struggle against apartheid entered its final, turbulent decade, African students a...
This study examines the struggles of South African women from the beginning of the Union of South Af...
We investigate the potential relationship between female combatants and conflict duration. We conten...
This article examines women's role as combatants in national liberation forces in South Africa. Thre...
This article focuses on female combatants serving in armed conflicts in Africa, South America, and A...
This study examines the state assisted demobilisation and civilian reintegration of women excombatan...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routle...
Women have always contributed to conflict dynamics, both through their active support to armed group...
Siphokazi Magadla's Guerrillas and Combative Mothers rests on 40 life histories of women w...
In the numerous armed conflicts that are tearing the African continent apart, young women are partic...
Bibliography: leaves 290-311.xiii, 354, 14 leaves : ill. (chiefly col.) ; 30 cm.This study investiga...
This is the published version. Copyright 2015 University of Chicago PressThe article discusses effor...
An analysis of gendered fighter constructions in the liberation movements in Eritrea and southern Su...
Research into conflicts in Africa has demonstrated the numerous ways in which war can be disempoweri...
This article examines the extent to which the participation of women in the military furthers or hin...
As South Africa’s struggle against apartheid entered its final, turbulent decade, African students a...
This study examines the struggles of South African women from the beginning of the Union of South Af...
We investigate the potential relationship between female combatants and conflict duration. We conten...