Yahoo Québec Recherche sur tout le Web

Résultats de recherche

  1. 1 oct. 2015 · This Was Not Our War: Bosnian Women Reclaiming the Peace. Book. Jan 2004; Swanee Hunt; ... Troubled Encounters: Feminism Meets IR3. War, Peace, and Security4. Gendering the Global Economy5.

  2. 1 août 2014 · As ICTY judgments have confirmed, women were not merely collateral damage of the war, but in most cases, primary targets of organised violence—including sexual violence—by armed men (ICTY 1996). In addition to the 10,000 killed, it is estimated that between 20,000 and 50,000 women and girls were raped and systematically abused during the war (Orentlicher 1997 ).

  3. Tatjana "Tanja" Ljujić-Mijatović ( Serbian Cyrillic: Татјана "Тања" Љујић-Мијатовић; born 11 May 1941) is a Bosnian former politician. By vocation, she is a horticulturist and landscape designer. During the Bosnian War, Ljujić-Mijatović served as the Serb member of the Presidency of the Republic of Bosnia and ...

  4. 8 avr. 2015 · Abstract. Mainstream transitional justice and peacebuilding practices tend to re-entrench gendered hierarchies by ignoring women or circumscribing their presence to passive victims in need of protection. As a consequence we have limited knowledge about the multifaceted ways women do justice and build peace.

  5. Worlds Apart tells of a well-meaning foreign policy establishment often deaf to the voices of everyday people. Its focus is the Bosnian War, but its implications extend to any situation that prompts the consideration of military intervention on humanitarian grounds. Ambassador Swanee Hunt served in Vienna during the Bosnian War and was ...

  6. In a study with Bosnian women survivors of the war, Skjelsbaek (2006) reports their account of pre-war life as a ‘paradise’ in all aspects (p.381). Hunt (2004) also argues that communism had guaranteed low unemployment levels, and as there was economic stability, families were flourishing with low divorce rates, guaranteed maternity leave and state-run childcare.

  7. 8 avr. 2015 · Abstract. Mainstream transitional justice and peacebuilding practices tend to re-entrench gendered hierarchies by ignoring women or circumscribing their presence to passive victims in need of protection. As a consequence we have limited knowledge about the multifaceted ways women do justice and build peace.