Social ecologies of health and conflict-related sexual violence: Translating “healthworlds” into transitional justice

IF 1 2区 社会学 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Journal of Human Rights Pub Date : 2022-02-22 DOI:10.1080/14754835.2021.2020627
J. Clark
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Abstract

Abstract This article discusses the relationship between health and transitional justice through a particular focus on the issue of conflict-related sexual violence. It is not, however, about the individual health needs of victims-/survivors, nor about possible ways that transitional justice processes might address these. Drawing on empirical data from Bosnia-Herzegovina, Colombia and Uganda, it explores some of the health legacies of sexual violence in conflict and their wider significance for transitional justice. Embracing the World Health Organization’s definition of health as “a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity”, the article specifically seeks to demonstrate that conflict-related sexual violence (and its frequent entanglement with other forms of violence) affects not only individual but also social-ecological health. The article’s overall contention, thus, is that in the context of transitional justice, more than individual health matters. The broader “health” of social ecologies themselves is also critically important. Ultimately advocating a social-ecological reframing of transitional justice, the article utilizes Germond & Cochrane’s (2010) concept of “healthworlds” to explore what this reframing might look like in practice.
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健康和与冲突有关的性暴力的社会生态:将“健康世界”转化为过渡司法
摘要本文通过特别关注与冲突有关的性暴力问题,讨论了健康与过渡时期司法之间的关系。然而,这与受害者/幸存者的个人健康需求无关,也与过渡司法程序可能解决这些问题的方式无关。根据波斯尼亚和黑塞哥维那、哥伦比亚和乌干达的经验数据,本报告探讨了冲突中性暴力的一些健康遗产及其对过渡时期司法的更广泛意义。这篇文章接受了世界卫生组织对健康的定义,将其定义为“一种完全的身体、心理和社会健康状态,而不仅仅是没有疾病或虚弱”,特别试图证明与冲突有关的性暴力(及其与其他形式暴力的频繁纠缠)不仅影响个人健康,而且影响社会生态健康。因此,这篇文章的总体论点是,在过渡时期司法的背景下,不仅仅是个人健康问题。更广泛的社会生态“健康”本身也至关重要。文章最终主张对过渡时期正义进行社会生态重构,并利用Germond和Cochrane(2010)的“健康世界”概念来探索这种重构在实践中可能是什么样子。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
3.10
自引率
21.10%
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0
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