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</script>Sexual violence on women has been a regular feature of warfare throughout human history. In both civil and international armed conflicts, sexual violence has been perpetrated on women in the form of rapes, sexual slavery, molestations and forced pregnancies. While the perpetrators are men from groups like state forces, political and insurgent groups, the victims are women from the largely non-combatant civil society. Such offences cause immense psychological, physical and emotional trauma in the victims, their families and their societies. Yet despite the increased awareness of these negative impacts and its widespread global condemnations, sexual violence has still largely remained prevalent in modern conflicts and has been regarded as an unavoidable consequence of any conflict. Recent studies, interrogating the causes behind these offences, have been mostly limited to feminist socio-cultural perspectives that stress on the influence of patriarchal gender identities. However, the systematic patterns of sexual crimes in recent conflicts also point to other vital factors and some scholars have highlighted how sexual violence is willingly committed in conflicts by the combatants to achieve specific political and strategic objectives and influence the outcome of the conflict in their favor. Additional research is crucial to identify how and why sexual violence is strategically used and weaponized in conflicts. This paper seeks to contribute in this regard by analysing the significance of sexual violence in the Kashmir conflict. By using data from oral and literary narratives, this paper explores the impact of sexual offences in Kashmir and makes the argument that sexual violence, particularly rape, was used as a deliberate, intentional strategic weapon of war in the Kashmir conflict for securing political objectives.
Gender violence, Sexual violence, Wartime rape, Kashmir Conflict, Human rights violations.
Gender violence, Sexual violence, Wartime rape, Kashmir Conflict, Human rights violations.
| citations This is an alternative to the "Influence" indicator, which also reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | 0 | |
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