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Volumn 18, Issue 1, 2006, Pages 119-135

"i didn't want to die so i joined them": Structuration and the process of becoming boy soldiers in Sierra Leone

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EID: 32144448506     PISSN: 09546553     EISSN: None     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1080/09546550500384801     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (79)

References (51)
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    • (1998) Africa , vol.68 , Issue.2 , pp. 183-199
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    • Youth gangs in nicaragua: Gang membership as structured individualisation
    • Closely intertwined with structuration theory is the notion of structured individualization that likewise encapsulates the idea of individual action integrally connected to broader structural forces. See Richard Maclure and Melvin Sotelo, "Youth Gangs in Nicaragua: Gang Membership as Structured Individualisation," Journal of Youth Studies, 7, no. 4 (2004): 417-432.
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    • note
    • Sponsored by the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), the study has been conducted by the authors, who work at the University of Ottawa, in collaboration with colleagues who are affiliated with Defence for Children International, Sierra Leone (DCI-SL), a Sierra Leonean NGO.
  • 32
    • 33746586181 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Engaging the voices of girls in the aftermath of sierra leone's conflict: Experiences and perspectives in the culture of violence
    • forthcoming
    • Other publications will focus on the experiences and perspectives of girl child soldiers in Sierra Leone: Myriam Denov and Richard Maclure (forthcoming), "Engaging the Voices of Girls in the Aftermath of Sierra Leone's Conflict: Experiences and Perspectives in the Culture of Violence," Anthropologica;
    • Anthropologica
    • Denov, M.1    Maclure, R.2
  • 33
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    • Girls and small arms in sierra leone: Victimization, participation and resistance
    • (forthcoming) Vanessa Farr and Albrecht Schnabel, eds. (Tokyo: United Nations University Press)
    • Myriam Denov and Richard Maclure (forthcoming) "Girls and Small Arms in Sierra Leone: Victimization, Participation and Resistance," in Vanessa Farr and Albrecht Schnabel, eds., Gender Perspectives on Small Arms and Light Weapons (Tokyo: United Nations University Press).
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    • Westport, CT: Greenwood Press
    • The notion of "coercive persuasion" has been normally referred to the technique of controlling POWs through means of rewards and punishments. See Andrew J. Pavlos, The Cult Experience (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1982), 51-52. Since many boys who were abducted by the RUF were subjected to a similar reward-and-punishment pattern of control, we find the term to be particularly apt in describing this process.
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    • Monograph no. 100 (London: Institute of Security Studies)
    • Our interviewees nonetheless indicated that other children known to them did join the RUF of their own volition, some who were motivated by revolutionary ideals, others who hoped for material gain. This is similar to accounts in Krijn Peters, "Re-examining Voluntarism: Youth Combatants in Sierra Leone," Monograph no. 100 (London: Institute of Security Studies, 2004).
    • (2004) Re-examining Voluntarism: Youth Combatants in Sierra Leone
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    • In this respect, child soldiery was strikingly similar to urban youth gang membership; See Scott H. Decker and Barrik van Winkle, Life in the Gang: Family, Friends, and Violence (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 75.
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    • The kamajoi militia: Civil war, internal displacement and the politics of counter-insurgency
    • The kamajors were local game hunters who were used as scouts during government army patrols as early as 1991. From 1993, in response to continued attacks of the RUF and the inadequate protection of the rapidly expanded and undisciplined government army (the SLA), local communities began to organize civil defense groups to protect their villages. Drawn from the hunter tradition known in the South and East as kamajo and in the North as tamaboro and kapra, the kamajor movement was more or less organized as a guild to fight against the RUF; See Patrick Muana, "The Kamajoi Militia: Civil War, Internal Displacement and the Politics of Counter-Insurgency," Africa Development 22, nos. 3 & 4 (1997): 77-100. ECOMOG (the Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group) was the Nigerian-led West-African intervention force that defended the Freetown peninsula against an RUF incursion and fought to reclaim major provincial centres from the RUF.
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    • Muana, P.1
  • 48
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    • note
    • While the RUF was renowned for its wanton cruelty, the forces that it opposed - the kamajors, ECOMOG, and government troops - by no means eschewed similar forms of brutality against children.


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