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Confronting the Reality of Gender-based Violence in Northern Uganda
Authors:Okello, Moses Chrispus   Hovil, Lucy
Affiliation:* Head of Research and Advocacy, Refugee Law Project, Makerere University, Uganda; and Project Coordinator of the Transitional Justice Project of the Faculty of Law, Makerere University, the Human Rights and Peace Center (HURIPEC) and Refugee Law Project (RLP). Email: moses_chrispusokello{at}yahoo.com
"{dagger}" Senior Research Associate, Refugee Law Project, Makerere University, Uganda. Email: lucy{at}hovil.co.uk
Abstract:Two decades of conflict in northern Uganda have had a devastatingimpact on the lives of thousands of civilians. Like so manyof today's ‘dirty wars,’ gender-related crimes havebeen pervasive. While numerous disciplines over the past centuryhave developed sophisticated theories for understanding thenature and agency surrounding sexual offences, the nascent fieldof transitional justice is only just beginning to grapple withthese issues or design appropriate measures of redress. Thispaper is based on research undertaken to look at issues of gender-basedviolence (GBV) in four camps for the internally displaced innorthern Uganda in order to provide insight into the natureand prevalence of GBV within a specific context. The findingsshow that specific GBV dynamics need to be scrutinised withinzones of conflict and taken into consideration in the policiesadopted post-conflict. The paper both illuminates the natureof such abuses within the Ugandan context and points to theneed for concerted attention to be paid to the pervasive genderdimensions of violence when designing transitional justice mechanisms.
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