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Female War Crime Perpetrators in Bosnia and Herzegovina

from PART I - WOMEN'S INVOLVEMENT IN ARMED CONFLICT

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 March 2019

Alette Smeulers
Affiliation:
Professor of Criminal Law and Criminology of International Crimes at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
Olivera Simić
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer at the Law School of Griffith University, Australia.
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Most of the literature on women and warfare, or women and genocide, analyses women's role from a victim-centred perspective. Although research has shown that most perpetrators are men, women too have been involved in the perpetration of war crimes. Yet research and literature on the role of women as war criminals and enablers of genocide remain staggeringly meagre, especially compared with the weight of research preoccupied with women as victims of violence rather than its agent. The existing scholarship on women perpetrators or active supporters of violent regimes is largely focused on the role of women in Nazi Germany or, more recently, women who committed acts of genocide in Rwanda. However, as the evidence suggests, women, in much larger numbers than usually presumed, can become active agents of genocide and torture – and their role and motivations therefore demand greater attention. Sjoberg and Gentry propose that women today are continuously being idolised as pristine and pure objects incapable of mass murder and genocidal behaviour. They argue that convicted female perpetrators, instead of becoming a representation of female capabilities in the perpetration of genocide, tend to be stripped of agency, with the severity of their actions reduced to pure happenstance, or the result of male manipulation or previous abuse. Alternatively, these women are characterised as mentally disturbed, or wicked, with a deviant sexual appetite. Sjoberg and Gentry call this the mother/monster/ whore narrative. In short their argument is that, female perpetrators are generally not perceived as being real women.

Although Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) became notorious for war crimes committed primarily against women, this chapter will explore the role of women in BiH as perpetrators during the armed conflict of the 1990s, in order to get a better insight in the agency of women who commit such crimes. Apart from Biljana Plavšić, the former co-President of the Bosnian Serb leadership whose case has received international publicity (as the first and only woman tried before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY)), so far there has been little scholarly interest in female perpetrators of war crimes. Yet, over the past few years, several women have been charged with committing war crimes before the Bosnian domestic courts.

Type
Chapter
Information
Gender and War
International and Transitional Justice Perspectives
, pp. 65 - 92
Publisher: Intersentia
Print publication year: 2019

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