Gendered Human Rights: The International Community’s Failed Response to the Persecution of Women
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Politics & Policy
ISSN
1555-5623
Volume
29
Issue
1
DOI
10.1111/j.1747-1346.2001.tb00586.x
First Page
121
Last Page
145
Publication Date
1-1-2000
Abstract
Increasingly women's human rights are being violated as evidenced most recently in Afghanistan and Algeria. The persecution women face is often gender-related. The international community has repeatedly failed to acknowledge that gender-related persecution is as acute and as debilitating as other forms of persecution, i.e., ethnic, religious, political opinion. This failure to acknowledge gender-related persecution has been detrimental to female refugees and has resulted in inconsistent care and protection for them. Today there are well more than 20 million refugees, the majority of whom are female. The gender-related human rights abuses suffered by women, the failure of the international community to acknowledge this abuse, and the gendered nature of the care and protection female refugees receive, are the foci of this paper.
Recommended Citation
Campbell, P. J.
(2000).
Gendered Human Rights: The International Community’s Failed Response to the Persecution of Women.
Politics & Policy, 29(1), 121–145.
DOI: 10.1111/j.1747-1346.2001.tb00586.x
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/ed-facarticles/187