Generación de Nuevo Conocimiento: Artículos publicados en revistas especializadas - Electrónicos
Misogyny in ‘post-war’ Afghanistan: the changing frames of sexual and gender-based violence
Fecha
2016-07-28Registro en:
Ahmad, L., & Anctil Avoine, P. (2016). Misogyny in ‘post-war’ afghanistan: The changing frames of sexual and gender-based violence. Bogotá: doi:10.1080/09589236.2016.1210002
Autor
Ahmad, Lida
Anctil Avoine, Priscyll
Institución
Resumen
Although the US and NATO invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 was ideologically
justified under the banner of democracy and women’s rights, the latter issue
has been completely forgotten within the public sphere since then. As the
war has officially ended in Afghanistan, new forms of misogyny and sexual
and gender-based violence (SGBV) have arisen. The ‘post-war’ Afghan context
presents an institutional normalization of violence, favouring a culture of
rape and impunity. The changing frames of violence against women are
widely related to the political situation of the country: while public attention
is focused on peace agreements, women’s issues are relegated to banalities
and depicted as ‘everyday’ news. Meanwhile, new frames of SGBV appear as
body part mutilation within marriage, forced prostitution, and increasing
domestic violence, partly due to the growing consumption of opium but
also to the perpetuation of powerful warlords in state structures. This article
draws on gender studies to analyse the current misogynist culture in ‘postwar’
Afghanistan, framing the new forms of violence induced by successive
armed conflicts. It relies on interviews conducted in 2013 in Afghanistan; and
on secondary sources, mostly taken from the Revolutionary Association of
the Women of Afghanistan and Human Rights Watch reports.