1-治理性别:尼日利亚北部的暴力极端主义

A. Okech
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文借鉴了在尼日利亚北部迈杜古里进行的一项定性研究,揭示了影响女性加入博科圣地的性别逻辑、她们的角色、她们返回后社区对她们的看法,以及这些动态如何影响尼日利亚政府和民间社会组织的“去激进化”计划。该研究表明,缺乏性别权力分析再现了激进化理论和计划中关于谁被激进化以及为什么激进化的明显的主导形象,从而限制了对推动与尼日利亚北部博科圣地联系的因素的整体反应。文章指出,对妇女与武装团体联系并返回社区的经历进行更细致的解读,为重新构思融入方案提供了机会。Awino Okech,伦敦大学亚非学院。电子邮件:ao21@soas.ac.uk
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1 - Governing Gender: Violent Extremism in Northern Nigeria
This article draws on a qualitative study piloted in Maiduguri, Northern Nigeria, to unpack the gender logics that shape why women join Boko Haram, their roles, how they are perceived by their communities on their return and how these dynamics inform the ‘deradicalisation’ programmes of the Nigerian government and civil society organisations. The study reveals that the absence of a gender power analysis reproduces the dominant tropes evident in radicalisation theories and programmes about who is radicalised and why, thus limiting a holistic response to the factors that drive association with Boko Haram in Northern Nigeria. The article points to the opportunities that a more nuanced reading of women’s experiences of associating with armed groups and their return to their communities offers to re-conceptualising integration programmes.  Awino Okech, SOAS, University of London. Email: ao21@soas.ac.uk
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来源期刊
Africa Development/Afrique et Developpement
Africa Development/Afrique et Developpement Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: Africa Development (ISSN 0850 3907) is the quarterly bilingual journal of CODESRIA published since 1976. It is a social science journal whose major focus is on issues which are central to the development of society. Its principal objective is to provide a forum for the exchange of ideas among African scholars from a variety of intellectual persuasions and various disciplines. The journal also encourages other contributors working on Africa or those undertaking comparative analysis of developing world issues. Africa Development welcomes contributions which cut across disciplinary boundaries. Articles with a narrow focus and incomprehensible to people outside their discipline are unlikely to be accepted.
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