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War through an Intersectional Lens seeks for the first time to understand how women combatants experience war and post-war period given their multiple intersecting identities and subjectivities. It employs in-depth interviews, extensive archival research, and analysis of wide-ranging primary and secondary sources. Keshab Giri finds that women combatants experience war and post-war period differently given their intersecting identities and subjectivities. Any policies and programs seeking to improve their post-conflict reintegration and peacebuilding fail if they don't take the intersectional nature of their war and post-war experiences into account.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
War through an Intersectional Lens seeks for the first time to understand how women combatants experience war and post-war period given their multiple intersecting identities and subjectivities. It employs in-depth interviews, extensive archival research, and analysis of wide-ranging primary and secondary sources. Keshab Giri finds that women combatants experience war and post-war period differently given their intersecting identities and subjectivities. Any policies and programs seeking to improve their post-conflict reintegration and peacebuilding fail if they don't take the intersectional nature of their war and post-war experiences into account.
Autorenporträt
Keshab Giri is a Lecturer in International Relations at The University of St Andrews. He is also a research fellow at the Women and Public Policy Program, Harvard Kennedy School (2023-24). Dr Giri's research has been published in journals like International Studies Quarterly, International Studies Review, Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, and Global Studies Quarterly. His PhD thesis titled, "Experiences of Female Ex-Combatants in the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal: Endless Battles and Resistance" received the 2022 Thelma Hunter Gender and Politics PhD Prize from the Australian Political Studies Association (APSA). His research interests include women combatants, intersectionality, gender and war, violent extremism, leftist insurgencies, feminist International Relations, feminist research methodology, rebel governance, and governance of intimacy in rebel groups.