Coming back from the bush : gender, youth and reintegration in northern Sierra Leone
This thesis explores the postwar reintegration strategies of young women who had forcibly become affiliated with one of the fighting factions during the ten years of civil war in Sierra Leone. Instead of conceptualizing reintegration as the result of policies, the author defines it as the dynamic process that revolves around the (re- )establishment of relations between the individual and social networks. The thesis seeks to understand how the local meaning of the social identities 'youth' and 'female gender' affect the course of this process. It demonstrates how the social and cultural identity of the women as either daughters or wives influenced their decision to return or not to their former community and how they constantly have to negotiate their social identities in the community in order to integrate into new networks. Data collected during six months of fieldwork in Sierra Leone in 2003-2004 provide the basis for describing how reintegration is highly diversified and contextual. Bibliogr.: p. [119]-123.-Met noten. XII, 123 p. : foto's, table ; 24 cm.
- Van Gog, Janneke van.
- NIOD Bibliotheek
- Text
- ocn213378922
- Social integration--Sierra Leone.
- Social conflict--Sierra Leone.
- Youth--Sierra Leone.
Bij bronnen vindt u soms teksten met termen die we tegenwoordig niet meer zouden gebruiken, omdat ze als kwetsend of uitsluitend worden ervaren.Lees meer