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Gender Violence in Africa: African Women's Responses

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This book penetrates the silence on a taboo topic, mustering an impressive array of sources to shed much-needed light on gender violence, an urgent and controversial topic gaining increasing exposure in human rights arenas. December Green analyzes acts of gender violence as they occur in one region, to uncover the dynamics that both perpetuate the abuses and enable women to survive them. She compares the effects of gender violence throughout sub-Saharan Africa, describing gender violence as a multilayered phenomenon operating within three contexts: the family, the economy, and the state. This study offers a unique perspective on human rights violations because instead of focusing only on the abuses themselves or describing how African women can be "saved," Green recognizes women's agency as an essential aspect of the study of gender violence. She discusses the variety of ways in which African women utilize formal and informal power structures to resist gender violence covertly and overtly, at the individual, inter-group, national, and international levels.

298 pages, Hardcover

First published August 14, 1999

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December Green

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