Feminist and Human Rights Struggles in Peru

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESSISBN: 9780252081002

Decolonizing Transitional Justice

Price:
Sale price$60.99
Stock:
Out of Stock - Available to backorder

By Pascha Bueno-Hansen
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
240

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

""Cutting-edge and original. Bueno-Hansen reveals the meaning behind the rhetoric of human rights promotion in the aftermath of conflict. Using an approach that articulates gender, ethnicity, and coloniality, she illuminates the impact of human rights-based justice processes on marginalized peoples' lives.""--Elisabeth Jay Friedman, author of Unfinished Transitions: Women and the Gendered Development of Democracy in Venezuela, 1936-1996 ""This book provides remarkable insights into the overlap and disjunctions between the human rights movement's response to atrocities involving women, the response of the feminist movement, and the needs of the women who have been harmed. It is an important and nuanced contribution to the literature on the gendered realities of post-conflict societies. Set in Peru, nonetheless it speaks to a universal experience of conflict and its aftermath.""--Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, co-editor of Guantánamo and Beyond: Exceptional Courts and Military Commissions in Comparative Perspective ""A compelling analysis of the Peruvian transitional justice process. Bueno-Hansen expands the framework of transitional justice to encompass the afterlife of colonialism. She extends the definition of gender-based violences beyond sexual violence. Feminist and Human Rights Struggles in Peru is soundly argued and thought provoking.""--Rosa-Linda Fregoso, coeditor of Terrorizing Women: Feminicide in the Américas ""In this interdisciplinary and theoretically innovative book, Pascha Bueno-Hansen makes important contributions not only to scholarship on gender and the Peruvian Truth and Reconciliation Commission, but also to broader debates in the fields of transitional justice and in gender and women's studies by explicitly demonstrating the importance of an intersectional analysis for a full understanding of post-war contexts."" --Christina Ewig, author of Second-Wave Neoliberalism: Gender, Race, and Health Sector Reform in Peru

You may also like

Recently viewed