Publication | Closed Access
International Human Rights, Gender-Based Violence, and Local Discourses of Abuse in Postconflict Liberia: A Problem of “Culture”?
59
Citations
41
References
2012
Year
Critical Race TheoryLawFeminist DebateSocial SciencesLocal DiscoursesPeacekeepingViolence Against WomenGender StudiesGlobal MandatesSocial NormsPostconflict Humanitarian InterventionLateral ViolenceAfrican ConflictCrime Against HumanitySexual ViolenceGender-based ViolenceIntersectionalityHuman RightsInternational Human RightsInternational LawHuman Rights LawFeminist TheorySocial MovementsFeminist MethodologiesFeminist PhilosophyHumanitarian AidAfrican Human RightsSexual AbuseSociologySocial JusticeGlobal Justice
Abstract: In this article we draw on three years of ethnographic observation of postconflict humanitarian intervention in Liberia to consider the process whereby global efforts in the areas of gender-based violence (GBV) and human rights are interacting with local debates over kinship, entitlement, personal rights, and social responsibility. This article draws upon Liberian narratives, complaints, and efforts to regulate, in a national context, social norms and behavior in regard to gender-based violence issues in postconflict life while also engaging with an ongoing international human rights discourse on the subject of GBV. Our ethnography takes a multiscalar approach to give a sense of the process, multiple discourses, and dialectics of power involved in this issue, and to demonstrate how the definition of “the GBV problem” in Liberia, the target of complex GBV interventions, is different from the conception held by agencies, governmental ministries, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) that are responsible for implementing global mandates.
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