Sandra Pertek: Violence Against Women, Displacement, and Religion, Gebunden
Violence Against Women, Displacement, and Religion
- Rethinking Humanitarianism
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- Verlag:
- Oxford University Press, 01/2027
- Einband:
- Gebunden
- Sprache:
- Englisch
- ISBN-13:
- 9780198994671
- Umfang:
- 272 Seiten
- Erscheinungstermin:
- 29.1.2027
- Hinweis
-
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
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Klappentext
Violence Against Women, Displacement, and Religion challenges dominant secular protection paradigms and offers a critical intervention in debates on humanitarian reform by placing religion and women's lived experiences at the centre of an integrated intersectional and socioecological analysis. It argues that religion is an integral part of displaced women's lives, often little understood, which requires a balanced engagement to resource protection.
Challenging dominant secular protection paradigms, this volume introduces an innovative framework for understanding religion in displaced women's experiences of violence. Drawing on mixed-methods research with humanitarian practitioners and displaced women from African and Levantine regions in Türkiye and Tunisia, it centres displaced women's voices and brings readers into Christian and Muslim survivors' intimate relationships with the sacred. The volume reveals how religion shifts across the social ecology of displacement-often as a resource for resilience when formal systems thin out and sometimes as a source of intersectional vulnerability.
Through rich empirical evidence and interdisciplinary analysis, the volume argues that humanitarian systems secularize women's experiences, even though religion is central to their lives. By bridging humanitarian and religious systems, this book calls for building an intersectional ecology of protection to improve outcomes for displaced women.
This timely volume complements debates on humanitarian reset and innovative approaches to financing refugee responses by advancing conceptual innovations such as the spiral continuum of violence, religion as a shifting intersectional vulnerability factor, the Conservation of Religious Resources and adaptive religious coping, and the spectrum of religious inclusion and exclusion. It bridges humanitarian, migration and religious systems to propose an intersectional ecology of protection. Interdisciplinary and empirically rich, this work makes a significant contribution to scholarship on gender, religion, forced migration, and humanitarianism, while offering practical insights for policy and practice. It seeks to disrupt disengaged scholarship and policy, offering new pathways for integrating religion, faith, and spirituality into humanitarian and migration policy and practice, while spotlighting women's agency.
An open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence.