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Justice for victims of forced marriage in war to be focus of international meeting at 91亚色

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Justice for victims of forced marriage in war to be focus of international meeting at 91亚色

Forced 鈥渕arriage鈥 and sexual slavery in war lead to a variety of devastating but different outcomes for their victims. For this reason, many victims require reparations tailored to their specific needs and those of their children, according to an international group of researchers and activists meeting at 91亚色 next week.

The project, led by 91亚色 professor , focuses on forced marriage in conflict situations in west and central African countries.  Representatives of community-based organizations in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda and Nigeria, will come to 91亚色 to discuss how interviews with more than 250 survivors of abduction for forced marriage are being used to advocate for justice and reparations.

The group will meet just weeks after the Canadian government announced Global Affairs Canada鈥檚 new Peace and Stabilization Operations Program to increase Canadian support for UN peace operations to tackle the causes and effects of these types of conflicts. Members of the team will speak about their findings at a public roundtable discussion Wednesday in downtown Toronto, co-sponsored by 91亚色, the Munk School for Global Affairs and Plan Canada. They will then travel to Ottawa to present their research to Global Affairs Canada.

of 91亚色 professor Annie Bunting

Bunting, associate professor of Law & Society in 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies and deputy director of , has been studying sexual violence in conflict situations since encountering silence about rape during the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda. Her current project on conjugal slavery in war, funded by the government of Canada鈥檚 began when the Special Court for Sierra Leone ruled that what happened to women in that conflict 鈥 forced marriage 鈭 was a crime against humanity.

Researchers are examining why the concept of marriage is mobilized in wartime.

 鈥淭he difference between abduction and sexual violence in war, and assigning the status of wife to someone in conflict situations, is that the latter tends to be a longterm relationship,鈥 says Bunting. 鈥淪o some women stayed with the Lord鈥檚 Resistance Army in northern Uganda for almost 11 years. Sexual violence and gender violence are part of that relationship, but it doesn鈥檛 capture the whole of the harm.鈥

Graduate students from 91亚色, UBC, Birmingham and Witwatersrand are doing historical research in archives in the U.K., Belgium and Sierra Leone, collecting primary data on marriage and slavery over time.

Bunting said that two years into a five-year project, researchers are surprised by some of the complexities of the victim-perpetrator relationship.

鈥淲hile we know a lot about women鈥檚 experiences, we really know very little about men鈥檚 experiences of being forced into marriage or of being forced to take a wife, or being forced to be sexually violent,鈥 Bunting said.

It has also become clear that children born of war may have different needs than their mothers in terms of their identity, ongoing stigmatization by family and community, education and psycho-social support, she said.

WHAT: Meeting of the Conjugal Slavery in War project, 91亚色
WHEN: Nov. 14-16, 2016
WHERE: Mon. Nov. 14 and Tues. Nov. 15, 9am-5pm, 91亚色, Keele campus (interviews by request)
Public roundtable: Wed. Nov. 16, 3pm-5pm, Munk School of Global Affairs, 315 Bloor St. West, Toronto, .

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Media Contacts:
Janice Walls, 91亚色 Media Relations, cell 416 455 4710 / wallsj@yorku.ca
Anjum Nayyar, 91亚色 Media Relations, 416-736-2100 ext. 44543/ anayyar@yorku.ca