Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

The Aftermath Sheila Meintjes

The Aftermath By Sheila Meintjes

The Aftermath by Sheila Meintjes


$10.00
Condition - Very Good
Only 1 left

Summary

What happens to women in the aftermath of war? This text asserts that for women there is no aftermath - a truce does not end gender violence. It asks how transitions from war to peace and from authoritarian to democratic regimes can become opportunities for real social change.

The Aftermath Summary

The Aftermath: Women in Post-conflict Transformation by Sheila Meintjes

What happens to women in the aftermath of war and internal armed conflict? Are gender and inter-generational relations transformed during the process of post-war reconstruction? This book asserts that there is no aftermath for women -- a truce does not bring an end to gendered violence. It shows how the post-war period is too late for women to transform patriarchal gender relations; the foundations for change must be built during conflict. The first part of this book asks how transitions from war to peace and from authoritarian to democratic regimes can be used as opportunities to move beyond the reconstruction of pre-war institutions to real social transformation. It presents an honest accounting of what women lose and gain in wartime and how they organise, as well as an analysis of why they fail to consolidate their gains. It explores the many dimensions of violence against women before, during and after war. It reflects on how war changes identities, on the myths that men and women invent about each other in wartime, and on the problems of reconciliation and women's solidarity; and it focusses specifically on shifts in gender relations in the context of post-conflict reconstruction and transformation. Finally, the contributors consider the relation of the state to society in the aftermath, searching for a vision of the transformed society. The evidence presented in the second part of this book documents the varied nature of war and the many post-war situations, including Haitian and Balkan examples, Asian cases, and experiences in different African conflict zones. The contributors analyse what women endure and what they construct during and after conflict, what obstacles they encounter in their search for autonomy and what bonds of solidarity they create in building peace.

The Aftermath Reviews

'This volume does contain much detailed and empirical research on the roles of women in modern conflicts.' Barbara Hately-Broad, Journal of Military History Praise for Meredeth Turshen's previous book, What Women do in Wartime: 'This remarkable book should be compulsory reading for anyone wanting to understand more about conflict and its impact on women and society as a whole...Comprehensive, readable and well referenced.' Health and Policy Planning 'The testimony provided in this book is vitally important...Turshen and Twagiramariya are to be commended for forcing the unthinkable into our awareness.' Review of African Political Economy 'What Women do in Wartime describes and analyses the experience of women in African civil wars...The images which emerge are both powerful and disturbing. [The book] serves as an insistent testimony of the personal suffering, tragedy and degradation of warfare.' International Affairs 'What Women do in Wartime provide[s] a powerful delineation and analysis of women's experiences in civil wars, wars of liberation and their aftermath.' Agenda 'An important and exciting contribution to [the] writing of women's narratives of war... It drives home the need to bring women into the decision-making process, be it for war-waging or sustainable peace-making'. Seminar

About Sheila Meintjes

Meredeth Turshen teaches gender and development and third world social policy at the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University. She has published widely on health, public policy and women's issues and is political co-chair of the Association of Concerned Africa Scholars. Anu Pillay is a gender and development practitioner and winner of South Africa's Ma Afrika award in 1996 for her contribution to women's education and activism. Sheila Meintjes is a senior lecturer in political studies, and co-ordinator of the Gender Studies Programme in the Graduate School of the Humanities and Social Sciences, University of the Witswatersrand, South Africa

Table of Contents

  • Part I: Overviews of the Themes
    • 1. There is No Aftermath for Women - Meredeth Turshen, Sheila Meintjes and Anu Pillay
    • 2. Women in Conflicts, Their Gains and Their Losses - Codou Bop
    • 3. Violence Against Women in The Aftermath - Anu Pillay
    • 4. Problems of Identity, Solidarity and Reconciliation - Tina Sideris
    • 5. War and Post-War Shifts in Gender Relations - Sheila Meintjes
    • 6. Engendering Relations of States to Societies in the Aftermath - Meredeth Turshen
  • Part II: Contemporary Experiences
    • 7. Ambivalent Gains in Conflicts in South Asia - Rita Manchanda
    • 8. Liberated, But Not Free: Women in Post-War Eritrea - Sondra Hale
    • 9. Rape in War and Peace: Social Context, Gender, Power and Identity - Tina Sideris
    • 10. Between Love, Anger and Madness: Building Peace in Haiti - Myriam Merlet
    • 11. Caring at the Same Time: On Feminist Politics during the NATO Bombing of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the Ethnic Cleansing of Albanians in Kosova, 1999 - Lepa Mladjenovic
    • 12. Healing and Changing: The Changing Identity of Women in the Aftermath of the Ogoni Crisis in Nigeria - Okechukwu Ibeanu
    • 13. Ambivalent Maternalisms: Cursing as Public Protest in Sri Lanka - Malathi de Alwis
    • 14. 'We want Women to be given an Equal Chance': Post-independence Rural Politics in Northern Namibia - Heike Becker

Additional information

GOR007531647
9781842770672
1842770675
The Aftermath: Women in Post-conflict Transformation by Sheila Meintjes
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
20020531
272
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - The Aftermath