La división sexual del trabajo por la paz: género y rehabilitación psobélica en El Salvador y Bosnia-Herzegovina
In: Estado y sociedad
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In: Estado y sociedad
In: Política exterior: revista bimestral, Band 11, S. 118-124
ISSN: 0213-6856
Examines terms of the Dayton peace accords and their implementation; Bosnia-Herzegovina. Summary in English p. 210.
In: Europa política. Càtedra Alfons Cucó
In: Espejo de la Argentina
In: Revista de estudios políticos, S. 277-297
ISSN: 0048-7694
Discusses the process of electoral engineering in the context of dispute settlement, with special reference to the case of Bosnia-Herzegovina and provisions of the 1995 Dayton agreements with regard to scheduling of elections.
In: Cuadernos de Trabajo de Hegoa, 50
World Affairs Online
In: Revista de relaciones internacionales, Heft 89, S. 137-146
ISSN: 0185-0814
Under peaceful conditions, men normally & naturally dominate women in many spheres of life. During wartime, gender roles & orders are dislocated. On the one hand, women may become principal actors behind the lines with the absence of men at home, while on the other hand, war creates problems for women, eg, prostitution, rape, & refugee status. Enemy women who are sexually violated during war serve the political logic supported by traditional gender systems. The situation of women during the war in the former Yugoslavia raised questions about prosecution for wartime sexual violation, which had not previously been specified in international codes on women's rights. 12 References. M. Pflum
In: Análisis político: revista del Instituto de Estudios Políticos y Relaciones Internacionales, Heft 36, S. 21-38
ISSN: 0121-4705
In: Estudios internacionales: revista del Instituto de Estudios Internacionales de la Universidad de Chile, Band 33, Heft 129, S. 58-75
ISSN: 0014-1518, 0716-0240
Discusses whether the conflict in Bosnia-Herzegovina from Apr. 1992-Nov. 1995 was a civil war or an international conflict.
In: Psicologia politica, Heft 13, S. 7-16
ISSN: 1138-0853
Explores the influence of fear on the levels of internal & external sensibility & tolerance of the interethnic conflict in the former Yugoslavia, positing that the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia & external responses resulted from real, possible, exaggerated, & imaginary fears. The US misunderstood the intra- & interethnic fears, became entangled in the conflict, & interfered with, rather than helped, its resolution. In accepting the peace accord, each of the different regions of the former Yugoslavia was allaying different fears. 12 References. Adapted from the source document.