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Chapter 1.. Woman-as-nationChapter 2. Conflict-related sexual violence in the DRC. Chapter 3. Empire-building and coerced sexual activities in post-invasion/occupation Iraq Chapter 4. Structural violence against conflict-affected females in Syria. Chapter 5. War-on-terror femininity and the sexualized violence(s) at Abu Ghraib. Chapter 6. Glocalization masculinities and violence(s) against men and boys in Darfur
‘Banwell’s careful scholarship challenges well-worn orthodoxies about gender, sexual violence, war and the state. A much needed addition to contemporary feminist criminology.’
‘Banwell’s book is truly imaginative. She draws on a wide range of interdisciplinary literature, constructs a framework that analyzes where and how gender is implicated in war and securitization. Taking a case study approach and adopting the assumptions of visual criminology, each chapter allows Banwell to demonstrate time and again her main arguments as well as the depth of her scholarship. This is a must read for students and academics alike. Chapter 1 ought to be on every undergraduate reading list for any criminological methods or theory course!’
‘Rather than asking who suffers more in armed conflicts, Banwell explores the unique ways women and men experience war. Noting that gender is often deployed to justify war: think men as valient and women as fragile beings in need of protection, she urges criminologists to study the “new” wars. She is particularly focused on ways that these wars often blur categories in ways that make girls and women uniquely vulnerable to gender based violence.’