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Abstract
The physical and psychological consequences of armed conflict and intimate partner
violence are well documented. Less research focuses on their intersection and the
linkages between domestic violence, gender-based discrimination, and the structural
violence of poverty in armed conflict. This paper describes emerging themes from qualitative
interviews with young women who have returned from abduction into the Lord's Resistance
Army in northern Uganda, many of whom were forcibly given as "wives" to commanders.
Their interviews reveal multiple levels of violence that some women experience in
war, including physical and sexual violence in an armed group, verbal and physical
abuse from extended family members, and intimate partner violence. Striking is the
violence they describe after escaping from the rebels, when they are back with their
families. The interviews point to how abduction into the armed group may exacerbate
problems but highlight the structural factors that permit and sustain intimate partner
violence, including gender inequalities, corruption in the police system, and devastating
poverty. Findings suggest that decreasing household violence will depend on the strength
of interventions to address all levels, including increasing educational and economic
opportunities, increasing accountability of the criminal justice system, minimizing
substance abuse, and improving the coping mechanisms of families and individuals exposed
to extreme violence.