2008
DOI: 10.1017/s0022278x07003072
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Making sense of violence: voices of soldiers in the Congo (DRC)

Abstract: During the last years the DRC has made itself known in the world for terrible acts of violence committed by armed men – militia and the regular army – against the civilian population. The voices of the soldiers and combatants have so far been absent in the accounts of this violence. This silence is problematic, both because it makes it harder to understand such violence, but also because it reinforces stereotypes of African warriors as primitive and anarchic, driven by innate violence and tribal hatred. Enquir… Show more

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Cited by 74 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…Some people just go crazy. 31 Rape is a result of that too, especially the bad rapes. Also, a lot is because of drugs.…”
Section: Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some people just go crazy. 31 Rape is a result of that too, especially the bad rapes. Also, a lot is because of drugs.…”
Section: Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Above all, they are cheap because so many young men are excluded from regular economic activity, lack social prospects and see picking up a gun and joining local warlords as at least a kind of livelihood. In the Congo, Baaz and Stern (2008) discovered that warfare has become one of the best (and often only) ways to make a living, particularly for landless, uneducated young men. War has become a business which many young recruits, and their leaders, have no desire to stop.…”
Section: Engendering the 'New Wars' Debate In Africamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the outbreak of conflict, military and rebel group leaders began to manipulate notions of masculinity to recruit members, pressuring men to take up arms in order to protect their female kin and defend their own honor (GTZ, 2009). The militarized groups of eastern Congo have exploited these traditional values to construct an ideal (read: "masculine") soldier as the "sexually potent male fighter," which is explicitly contrasted with feminine qualities that are associated with ineptitude (Ericksson Baaz & Stern, 2008).…”
Section: Masculinity In the Democratic Republic Of Congomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Soldiers in the DRC who have committed acts of sexual violence against women explained their transgressions by relying on ideals of masculinity and the norm of the "sexually potent male fighter" (Ericksson Baaz & Stern, 2008). Most soldiers also expressed fears of being perceived as insufficiently masculine.…”
Section: Masculinity In the Democratic Republic Of Congomentioning
confidence: 99%