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Girl soldiers: towards a gendered understanding of wartime recruitment, participation, and demobilisation

Denov, Myriam
Ricard-Guay, Alexandra
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2013-11-12
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Journal article
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15
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Scholarship on political violence and armed conflict has long been gender-blind. Often&nbsp;subsumed within the category of &lsquo;children&rsquo; (who are assumed to be male in the context&nbsp;of soldiery), girl soldiers have been subjected to a double invisibility. However, in the&nbsp;last decade the literature dedicated to the topic of girls within armed groups has grown.&nbsp;We now have a much clearer understanding of girls&rsquo; strengths and challenges, and&nbsp;clear evidence of their overall marginalisation both during wartime violence and&nbsp;following demobilisation. What is now needed is to implement what we have learnt, to&nbsp;support girls in the aftermath of violence, particularly in the long term. This article&nbsp;seeks to provide an overview of what is known about girl soldiers. It explores their entry&nbsp;into armed groups, and their multiple roles and wartime experiences, as well as their&nbsp;experiences of demobilisation and reintegration. To support the points raised, we&nbsp;highlight the voices and experiences of nine former girl soldiers from Colombia, and&nbsp;eight former girl soldiers from Sierra Leone, who were interviewed in 2010 and 2011.&nbsp;The realities of girls affected by armed conflict vary in different contexts, yet there are&nbsp;similarities. Girls&rsquo; options, roles, power relations, both during conflict and following&nbsp;demobilisation, are embedded within broader gendered power structures and identities. This article is hosted by our co-publisher Taylor & Francis. For the full table of contents for this and previous issues of this journal, please visit the <a href="http://www.genderanddevelopment.org">Gender and Development</a> website.
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English
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Gender & Development
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Conflict and violence
Volume
21
Issue
3
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1355-2074
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1364-9221
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