Women in South Sudan

Christopher Tounsel
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Since the late 19th-century, Southern Sudanese have experienced Anglo-Egyptian colonialism (1899–1956), national independence with Northern Sudan (1956), two civil wars that resulted in South Sudanese independence (1955–1972, 1983–2005), a civil war within the new nation (2013–2018), and the conclusion of that conflict (2018). Southern Sudanese women’s experiences within, and contributions to, this stream of cataclysmic events has been harrowing and significant. This tumultuous history is rife with harsh realities. Women and girls have consistently had unequal access to education compared to their male counterparts, been subjected to sexual violence, marginalized from the political sphere, and faced a multitude of socioeconomic constraints and hardships. Many social scientists, furthermore, have argued that women’s vulnerabilities have increased as the result of lengthy militarized violence. However, in the midst of these realities, women have found ways to make important contributions not only as mothers, wives, and daughters but also as soldiers, teachers, activists, agriculturalists, and in various other positions during each of the postcolonial liberation wars. While women’s political participation has been encouraged since South Sudan’s 2011 independence, war, sexual violence, and socioeconomic inequalities have kept the female population in a vulnerable position.
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南苏丹的妇女
自19世纪后期以来,南苏丹经历了英埃殖民主义(1899-1956)、与北苏丹的民族独立(1956)、导致南苏丹独立的两次内战(1955-1972年、1983-2005年)、新国家内部的内战(2013-2018年)以及冲突的结束(2018年)。南苏丹妇女在这一系列灾难性事件中的经历和贡献是令人痛苦和重要的。这段动荡的历史充斥着残酷的现实。与男性相比,妇女和女童接受教育的机会一直不平等,她们遭受性暴力,被政治领域边缘化,并面临诸多社会经济制约和困难。此外,许多社会科学家认为,由于长期的军事化暴力,妇女的脆弱性增加了。然而,在这些现实中,妇女不仅作为母亲、妻子和女儿,而且在每一次后殖民解放战争中作为士兵、教师、活动家、农民和其他各种岗位做出了重要贡献。自2011年南苏丹独立以来,妇女的政治参与得到了鼓励,但战争、性暴力和社会经济不平等使女性人口处于弱势地位。
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