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      Rwandan Women No More

      1
      Conflict and Society
      Berghahn Books

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          Abstract

          Since the 1994 Rwandan genocide, the current government has arrested approximately 130,000 civilians who were suspected of criminal responsibility. An estimated 2,000 were women, a cohort that remains rarely researched through an ethnographic lens. This article begins to address this oversight by analyzing ethnographic encounters with 8 confessed or convicted female génocidaires from around Rwanda. These encounters reveal that female génocidaires believe they endure gender-based discrimination for having violated taboos that determine appropriate conduct for Rwandan women. However, only female génocidaires with minimal education, wealth, and social capital referenced this gender-based discrimination to minimize their crimes and assert claims of victimization. Conversely, female elites who helped incite the genocide framed their victimization in terms of political betrayal and victor’s justice. This difference is likely informed by the female elites’ participation in the political processes that made the genocide possible, as well as historical precedence for leniency where female elites are concerned.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Conflict and Society
          Berghahn Books
          2164-4543
          2164-4551
          June 1 2015
          June 1 2015
          : 1
          : 1
          : 60-80
          Affiliations
          [1 ]University of Strathclyde erin.jessee@strath.ac.uk
          Article
          10.3167/arcs.2015.010106
          05a66571-12fc-4e6a-859e-f7c998fe244b
          © 2015
          History

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