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Systemic Silencing: Addressing Sexual Violence against Men and Boys in Armed Conflict and its Aftermath

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Rethinking Peacekeeping, Gender Equality and Collective Security

Part of the book series: Thinking Gender in Transnational Times ((THINKGEN))

Abstract

Feminist international legal scholarship is conventionally aimed at addressing the androcentric bias of international law. Its starting point, therefore, is that women have been and continue to be excluded from international law vis-à-vis both its emancipatory and protective potential. As Elisabeth Evatt states in her foreword to Hilary Charlesworth and Christine Chinkin’s seminal treatise, The Boundaries of International Law, international law ‘shows little concern for women, their interests and their special vulnerabilities’.1 However, in light of the proliferation of international laws, policies and programmes addressing conflict-related sexual violence over the course of the last two decades, this chapter seeks to add nuance to this claim. More specifically and towards this end, this chapter explores the silencing of male ‘victimhood’2 within mainstream international sexual violence discourse.

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Notes

  1. E. Evatt, ‘Foreword’, in H. Charlesworth and C. Chinkin, The Boundaries of International Law: A Feminist Analysis (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2000), p. x.

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© 2014 Chloé Lewis

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Lewis, C. (2014). Systemic Silencing: Addressing Sexual Violence against Men and Boys in Armed Conflict and its Aftermath. In: Heathcote, G., Otto, D. (eds) Rethinking Peacekeeping, Gender Equality and Collective Security. Thinking Gender in Transnational Times. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137400215_11

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