Women, War, and Liberia

The following is a very incomplete essay that I worked on a while back. It lacks any overarching structure and is largely unedited first-draft material, but it might be useful to some people. -EL

Women, War, and Liberia

Liberia’s modern history is irrevocably marked by the civil war that spanned a decade and a half. Much about the current state of its population and infrastructure can be attributed to that conflict. It has also been marked by the peace movement that followed. The explicitly gendered name and composition of the movement (Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace) at elucidates the gendering of the consequences to war; although men form the bulk (albeit not the entirety) of the combatants in the vast majority of conflicts, women are simultaneously participants and actors even at the same time that they might be victims. Although there are still major roadblocks for women in Liberia, the mobilization of women in the peace movement shows – not only is there a woman President, but women’s participation in higher government matches that of the USA in the mid-late 1990s.

Liberia’s Background, In Brief

Liberia emerged as a political state in 1847, although settlement began as early as 1822. (US Central Intelligence Agency) The nascent republic primarily consisted of freed US American and Caribbean slaves, although their descendants comprise only roughly 5% of the current Liberian population. Ironically, the indigenous majority population was socio-politically subjugated and it was not until the Samuel Doe’s 1980 coup d’état that the racial and ethnic balance of power shifted. (Kwekwe)

Liberia has been host to several violent conflicts during the period from 1980-2003 and in that time, there were only scant periods of relative peace and stability. It is estimated that roughly a quarter million people were killed during the course of this civil war, and countless more were injured and/or displaced. (Geneva Academy RULAC Project) Every warring faction has been reported to have engaged in widespread murder, rape, mutilation, torture, forced conscription (including that of minors), and enslavement. (Kwekwe)

The Rise and Fall of Charles Taylor

Although conflict in Liberia started in 1980 with Samuel Doe’s overthrow of the William Tolbert government, Charles Taylor is at the nexus of all following conflict. He successfully led the removal and execution of Samuel Doe in 1990, only to see his own forces splinter. An uneasy ceasefire was reached in 1995, but fighting broke out again by 1999. In 2003, he was forced in to exile, in part due to the efforts of the Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace movement. (Geneva Academy RULAC Project)

The Status of Women in Liberia Today
           
The 2013 Human Development Report published by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) listed Liberia 174th out of 186 nations in its Gender Inequality Index, dropping almost 30 ranks from its place in 2012. (Malik, 158) As of 2005, 54% of Liberian women were illiterate and during the period between 2006-2010, only 15.7% of women were able to achieve at least secondary education. (Seager 120, Malik 158) 13% of Liberia’s government comprised of women in 2008, with that number dropping to 11.7% by 2013. (Seager, 121, Malik 158)

Despite the dearth of women in government, Liberia is notable in that its President since 1995 has been a woman – Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. In 2007, it was the first nation to obtain an all-female peacekeeping police force. (Seager, 103) Human Rights Watch has reported that the number of recorded rapes nearly doubled between 2006 and 2007 despite the passage of the 2006 Rape Amendment Act. (Human Rights Watch, 133)

Gendered Implications of Conflict

Findings in post-conflict research carried out by Isis-Women’s International Cross-Cultural Exchange (Isis-WICCE), the Ministry of Gender and Development in Liberia, and Women in Peacebuilding Network (WIPNET) discovered widespread rape and sexual torture, chronic surgical and gynecological complaints, and psychiatric disorders. (Liebling-Kalifani et al., 9-11) According to Liebling-Kalifani et al., there has been a high incidence of comorbid “[p]sychological problems, attempted suicide and alcohol abuse” with cases of reported gynecological issues, suggesting a causal link. (ibid., 10) They report that, “…well over half of the women experienced some form of sexual torture,” (ibid., 9) that “[s]ixty-eight point five percent of women respondents had at least one gynaecological complaint,” (ibid., 10), and that “[a]round half of the participants in the study had significant psychological distress indicating probably psychiatric disorder.” (ibid., 11)

Blurring the line between Combatant and Victim

Aaronette M. White complicates the notion that men commit acts of violence and that women suffer and mourn, arguing that “[d]espite the multiple factors working against women’s involvement in war, many contemporary African women served in African liberation armies struggling for political independence from European colonial rule.” (White, 71) In Liberia, as in other conflict zones, care must be taken not to characterize all of the combatants as men and all of the victims as women. Doing so reconstitutes the gendered norms of masculinity and femininity responsible for systemic patriarchal violence, grossly oversimplifies the conflict and the peace and reconciliation process, and renders female combatants invisible. Cynthia Enloe offers as an example Hanoi’s Women’s Museum. It is dedicated to Vietnamese motherhood and ignores the reality of childlessness among female veterans. (Enloe, 249)

It is important to note that it is possible to descriptively address gendered specificities, sociopolitical attitudes regarding gender, and specifically gendered forms of violence without adhering to prescriptive assumptions about subject/object, actor/non-actor relationships. Without the ability to descriptively analyze structural power, there is an unfortunate tendency to individualize problems rather than indict systems of domination.

It is also critical to remember that in Liberia, many of the combatants were recruited and press-ganged as children, making them victims in their own right. There is no question of the wide-spread (ab)use of these children – Enloe explains that “in the 1980s and early 1990s, a local term was created just to describe the process of press-gangs’ forced conscription of young boys: afesa, ‘sweeping up.’” (Enloe, 243) Many of these boys were either literal or effective orphans, their parents either dead or displaced. (ibid., 242)

Male and female former combatants were both “forced to perpetrate brutal acts of violence including rape, torture, and murder while they [were] subjected to the same.” (Johnson et al., 676) Over a quarter of these women saw active combat. (ibid., 688) Amongst former combatants, 35.3% of women and 16.5% of men reported being “forced to be [a] sexual servant or slave.” (ibid., 682) 42.3% of women and 32.6% of men reported having experienced sexual violence. In spite of rampant mental health issues like PTSD, Major Depressive Disorder, suicide ideation, and homicidal ideation, a significant proportion of former combatants have little to no access to mental health counseling and psychological services. (ibid., 683)

Refugees

The challenges that women faced in Liberian refugee camps were significant. For example, lack of resources, professional expertise, and trust in government and private facilities made providing adequate health care difficult to impossible, with the percentage of individuals treating themselves/seeking traditional healers/seeking health professionals falling at 92%, 63%, and 35% respectively. (Liebling-Kalifani et al., 12) Yet, it remains critical to acknowledge that while there are immense difficulties, there is, in the words of Sherwood and Liebling-Kalifani, “a relationship between resilience, access to rights and support and identity,” that can potentially manifest. (Sherwood and Liebling-Kalifani, 86) The authors argue that the assumption of PTSD-inevitability within a biomedical model as a response to conflict prevents genuine analysis of positive adaptation to wartime pressures. Some refugee camps may potentially become places where deeply social and emotionally significant communities develop, whether by kinship or shared experience. Some find peace through religious beliefs and practices that may be strengthened by their trials and tribulations. For some, this may re-awaken a sense of cultural belonging and identity. (ibid., 88)

Liberia provides a particularly poignant example of positive adaptation to wartime. There is little doubt that the women of Liberia suffered immensely as a result of the Liberian Civil War.
Yet, Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace sprang out of “women’s exhaustion and desperation – but there was nothing spontaneous about it…” (Gbowee, 138) Rather, it demonstrated a development of common consciousness and resolve. The actions of the movement were carefully orchestrated and organized, bringing together women of many different backgrounds and, notably, of different religions. (ibid., 138-139)

Sherwood and Liebling-Kalifani recognized this same potential, not just in Liberia in a variety of conflict zones in Africa. In fact, in their study, “[a]ll of the women interviewed described witnessing violence, sexual violence, or death of a relative as a result of conflict.” (Sherwood and Libeling-Kalifani, 96) Many expressed deep psychological and physical trauma. (ibid., 97) This much is well-established from a multitude of studies and surveys about conflict zones. Less studied, and perhaps every bit as vital, was the aforementioned relationship between resilience, access to rights and support, and identity. Most of the women living in these conflict zones developed coping mechanisms in order to proceed with their lives.

To many Westerners, the notion that living in the midst of battlefields can become mundane is literally unbelievable. Bearing in mind that state of privilege, it is easy to imagine how PTSD-informed medical models would be popular.

Do UN Peacekeepers Keep Peace?

Following the deposing of Charles Taylor, the UN Security Council established the UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL). UN Peacekeepers took over active duty in safeguarding the transitional government, enforcing the ceasefire, and security reform beginning on October 1, 2003. Within five years, there were almost 12,000 UN Peacekeepers from over 60 nations in Liberia. (Geneva Academy) On the surface, this seems like a strong show of worldwide support in helping Liberia rebuild. Yet, it is nevertheless necessary to ask the titular question.

In her analysis of militarized masculinity, Caitlin Maxwell turns a critical eye on UN Peacekeepers. Citing numerous documented cases of sexual assault, rape, and coercion by Peacekeeper forces and a blasé “boys will be boys” sentiment towards male sexual violence, she demonstrates how an embedded culture of masculinity fundamentally “has produced a tolerance for extreme behaviors such as sexual exploitation and abuse.” (Maxwell, 110) Some have suggested that all-woman military forces might prevent such actions, and indeed, Liberia has one such peacekeeping unit, comprised of women from India. (Seager, 103) Yet Maxwell contends that incidents like that of Abu Ghraib, the complicity of women in promoting “boys will be boys” ideologies, and multiple-axis of domination and power point to institutional problems that UN Peacekeepers may not be able to adequately solve without first addressing the centering of aggressive masculinities, racism, colonialism, and misogyny. (Maxwell, 110-111) She also points out Liberia as a case where the practice of othering locals came in to sharp focus – while HIV and AIDS were and continue to be a significant problem, the incidence rates were heavily exaggerated to ensure a basic level of discomfort and separation. (ibid., 111)

Jennifer Hyndman offers another critique of UN Peacekeeper actions with regards to the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR). Although the UNHCR Emergency Handbook offers some token support for culturally and spatially-aware coordination, it nevertheless gives greater priority to standardized advice. (Hyndman, 196) Such an approach has uncomfortable associations to instrumental rationality, which itself bears strong ties neoliberalism and economic imperialism.


Works Cited
Enloe, Cynthia H. Maneuvers: The International Politics of Militarizing Women's Lives. Berkeley: University of California, 2000. Print.
Gbowee, Leymah, and Carol Mithers. Mighty Be Our Powers: How Sisterhood, Prayer, and Sex Changed a Nation at War : A Memoir. New York: Beast, 2011. Print.
Hyndman, Jennifer. "Refugee Camps as Conflict Zones: The Politics of Gender." Sites of Violence: Gender and Conflict Zones. Ed. Wenona Giles and Jennifer Hyndman. Berkeley: University of California, 2004. 193-212. Print.
Johnson, K., J. Asher, S. Rosborough, A. Raja, R. Panjabi, C. Beadling, and L. Lawry. "Association of Combatant Status and Sexual Violence With Health and Mental Health Outcomes in Postconflict Liberia." JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association 300.6 (2008): 676-90. Print.
Kwekwe, Deddeh. "Violence Against Women in Liberia: A Situation Report." Women's World 8th ser. 39.26 (2006): n. pag. Web.
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"Liberia." World Report 2008: Events of 2007. New York: Human Rights Watch, 2008. 132-36. Print.
Liebling-Kalifani, Helen, Victoria Mwaka, Ruth Ojiambo-Ochieng, Juliet Were-Oguttu, Eugene Kinyanda, Deddeh Kwekwe, Lindora Howard, and Cecilia Danuweli. "Women War Survivors of the 1989-2003 Conflict in Liberia: The Impact of Sexual and Gender-Based Violence." Journal of International Women's Studies 12.1 (2011): 1-21. Print.
Malik, Khalid. 2013 Human Development Report: Rise of the South Human Progress in a Diverse World. Rep. Vol. 22. N.p.: United Nations Development Programme, n.d. Print.
Maxwell, Caitlin. "Moving Beyond Rape as a "Weapon of War": An Exploration of Militarized Masculinity and Its Consequences." Canadian Woman Studies 28.1 (2009/2010): 108-20. Print.
Seager, Joni. The Penguin Atlas of Women in the World: Fourth Edition. Brighton: Penguin, 2009. Print.
Sherwood, Katie, and Helen Liebling-Kalifani. "A Grounded Theory Investigation into the Experiences of African Women Refugees: Effects on Resilience and Identity and Implications for Service Provision." Journal of International Women's Studies 13.1 (2012): 86-108. Print.
White, Aaronette M. "All the Men Are Fighting for Freedom, All the Women Are Mourning Their Men, but Some of Us Carried Guns: A Race-Gendered Analysis of Fanon's Psychological Perspectives of War." War & Terror: Feminist Perspectives. Ed. Karen Alexander and Mary E. Hawkesworth. Chicago: University of Chicago, 2008. 61-88. Print.