Description
Book Synopsis• Underscores the problematic gap between transitional justice (TJ) and disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR) theory with practice; • Engages with critical debates on the ethics of research on gender and conflict.
Table of Contents1. Introduction: Reparation, Reintegration and Transformation 2. Gender, Violence and Reconciliation in Colombia 3. Tales of Machismo and Motherhood: Gendered Changes Across War and Peace 4. Between Victimization and Agency: Gendered Victim-Perpetrator Dichotomies 5: Gendering Reconciliation? The ‘Differential Perspective’ of Reparation and Reintegration 6: Gradations of Citizenship: Of Radical Agrarian Citizens and Transitional Justice Bureaucracies 7: Overcoming Obstacles to Citizenship: Imagining Post-Conflict Gender Equality 8: Conclusion: From Victimhood to Citizenship Appendix: Checklist for Ethics in Research on Gender and Conflict