Oxford Studies in Gender and International Relations
Female Combatants and the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal
Oxford Studies in Gender and International Relations
Female Combatants and the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal
War through an Intersectional Lens seeks for the first time to understand how women combatants experience war and post-war period given their multiple intersecting identities and subjectivities. It employs in-depth interviews, extensive archival research, and analysis of wide-ranging primary and secondary sources.
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In War through an Intersectional Lens, author Keshab Giri looks at how women combatants experience “pre-war,” “war,”and “post-war” both in public and private spheres by using intersectionality both
as a theoretical framework and methodological tool. Featuring thirty-nine in-depth interviews with Maoist female
ex-combatants, their leaders, and experts in Nepal between 2017 and 2018, this book is complemented by extensive
archival research, wide-ranging primary and secondary sources such as key Maoist statements and policy documents from the war era, memoirs of women ex-combatants, media sources, and academic literature.
Giri ultimately finds that female combatants’ experiences of “pre-war,> “war,” and “post-war,” both in public and private spheres, are conditioned by their interlocking systems of oppression and identities such as class, caste, ethnicity, social status, educational status, and geographical location. He makes an
important contribution to the feminist IR literature, feminist security studies, and makes significant policy implications, particularly concerning reintegration of female combatants, peacebuilding, and the Women Peace and Security agenda.