
Women, Violence and War
Wartime Victimization of Refugees in the Balkans
9789639116603
pages
Amsterdam University Press
Overview
Based on interviews with seventy women refugees, Women, Violence and War is a book about war as it is seen, lived and interpreted by women who were citizens of the former Yugoslavia.
Many of the accounts portray the horrific experiences the victims had to face and the book addresses issues of sexual, physical and psychological violence, as well as problems of confinement, upheaval and family separation. In a completely new insight the book dispels the myth that many of the women were peasants, and shows that in fact they were educated, middle-class women with independent careers. The study also depicts how some of the victims attempt to come to terms with the aftermath of wartime abuse.
This probing, accurate and unique investigation of victimization is an unparalleled volume that presents a completely new perspective maintaining that violence against women in war is not independent of peace-time victimization and the imbalance of power between sexes.
Author Bio
Vesna Nikolic-Ristanovic is senior researcher at the Institute of Criminological and Sociological Research, and lecturer at the Center for Women’s Studies, Belgrade.