Women, Internal Displacement and the Boko Haram Conflict: Broadening the Debate
Date
2020-03-02
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Security
Abstract
Women and children make up 79 per cent of the population
displaced by the conflict between the Nigerian government and
the armed movement informally known as Boko Haram. Their lived
experiences expose the considerable protection and humanitarian
risks of being female in violent contexts and the complexities of
addressing them. In addition to open conflict and inconsistent
policy and humanitarian responses, women’s displacement is
being protracted by disjunctures between women’s roles and
their construction as victims in policy and humanitarian frameworks.
Construed as lacking agency, displaced women are resisting
the hardship of displacement by returning to Boko Haram. This
article argues for a rethinking of the importance of context, autonomy
and agency as a prerequisite to reconciling false narratives
about women’s experiences of conflict and displacement and their
lived realities. It speaks to broader debates about women and
conflict and the utility of current approaches and frameworks for
addressing the roles and needs of women in these contexts.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Nigeria, gender and security, IDPs, UNSCR 1325, women, peace and security in Africa
Citation
Titilope F. Ajayi (2020): Women, Internal Displacement and the Boko Haram Conflict: Broadening the Debate, African Security, DOI: 10.1080/19392206.2020.1731110