TY - JOUR
T1 - The Colombian Truth Commission’s work on reproductive violence
T2 - Gendered victimhood and reproductive autonomy
AU - Sanchez Parra, Tatiana
N1 - Funding Information:
This article was made possible thanks to funding from Pontificia Universidad Javeriana (20097).
Funding Information:
I am extremely grateful to the Gender Working Group of the Colombian Commission for the Clarification of Truth, Coexistence, and Non-Repetition. In particular, to Salomé Gómez Corrales, Remedios Uriana and Alejandra Coll for their committed work and endless generosity. To all the victims and organisations in Colombia whose relentless work achieved the recognition of conflict-related reproductive violence within this truth-seeking mechanism. To Sara Cano, for her excellent work as a transcriber. To everyone who generously took the time to read versions of this article and offer constructive feedback. In particular, I’m grateful to Teresa Fernández Paredes, Sanne Weber, the colleagues at the Instituto de Estudios Sociales y Culturales Pensar (Pontificia Universidad Javeriana) and the International Relations Research Group (University of Edinburgh), the two anonymous reviewers and the editorial team of Feminist Review. This article was made possible thanks to funding from Pontificia Universidad Javeriana (20097).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s).
PY - 2023/12/11
Y1 - 2023/12/11
N2 - While conflict-related sexual violence has gained attention on international transitional justice agendas, conflict-related reproductive violence continues to be overlooked. The Colombian Truth Commission was the first truth-seeking transitional justice body worldwide to directly investigate these forms of conflict-related violence. Based on an ethnographic analysis of the Commission’s work on reproductive violence, in this article I engage with the reproductive justice framework to argue that the Commission’s work broadened understandings of both gendered victimhood and reproductive autonomy. Regarding gendered victimhood, I show that the Commission’s work focused on gaining recognition for conflict-related reproductive violence as distinct from conflict-related sexual violence, identifying conflict-related practices of reproductive violence and offering recommendations for addressing such practices. Secondly, I show that not only was the Commission the first truth-seeking body to directly investigate reproductive violence, but it did so through an understanding of reproductive violence that does not revolve around the notion of autonomy as individual choice. I argue that by doing this, the Commission compelled us to comprehensively consider war as part of the conditions under which reproductive autonomy may be exercised. Following this line, the latter part of the article focuses on the Colombian government’s use of glyphosate as a form of conflict-related reproductive violence that claimed ownership over the reproductive futures of entire communities by creating environmental devastation.
AB - While conflict-related sexual violence has gained attention on international transitional justice agendas, conflict-related reproductive violence continues to be overlooked. The Colombian Truth Commission was the first truth-seeking transitional justice body worldwide to directly investigate these forms of conflict-related violence. Based on an ethnographic analysis of the Commission’s work on reproductive violence, in this article I engage with the reproductive justice framework to argue that the Commission’s work broadened understandings of both gendered victimhood and reproductive autonomy. Regarding gendered victimhood, I show that the Commission’s work focused on gaining recognition for conflict-related reproductive violence as distinct from conflict-related sexual violence, identifying conflict-related practices of reproductive violence and offering recommendations for addressing such practices. Secondly, I show that not only was the Commission the first truth-seeking body to directly investigate reproductive violence, but it did so through an understanding of reproductive violence that does not revolve around the notion of autonomy as individual choice. I argue that by doing this, the Commission compelled us to comprehensively consider war as part of the conditions under which reproductive autonomy may be exercised. Following this line, the latter part of the article focuses on the Colombian government’s use of glyphosate as a form of conflict-related reproductive violence that claimed ownership over the reproductive futures of entire communities by creating environmental devastation.
U2 - 10.1177/01417789231205318
DO - 10.1177/01417789231205318
M3 - Article
SN - 0141-7789
VL - 135
SP - 28
EP - 44
JO - Feminist Review
JF - Feminist Review
IS - 1
ER -