To fight has always been the man’s habit, not the woman’s. Law and practice have developed that difference, whether innate or accidental. Scarcely a human being in the course of history has fallen to a woman’s rifle.
—Virginia Woolf, Three Guineas
I did not come to the front to die for the revolution with a dishcloth in my hand.
—Manuela, Spanish miliciana
The image of a smiling young woman holding an assault rifle has become a common feature of media reports about the Partiya Karkerên Kurdistanê (PKK) and its allied Yekîneyên Parastina Gel (YPG) in Turkey and Syria. The extent of the female guerrillas’ involvement in the conflict was dramatically illustrated during the Battle for Kobane in late 2014 and early 2015 as Kurdish militias—including thousands of female combatants—engaged in brutal fighting against the forces of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) along the Turkish-Syrian border. The narrative of armed female warriors battling the forces of a radical Islamist army accused of mass rape, sexual slavery, and other atrocities against women (as well as men) made for evocative headlines, some of which boasted of the “badass” nature of these women and the “fear” they supposedly instilled in ISIS fighters (see Robson 2014; Salih 2014; Smith 2014). Yet, the sense of novelty inherent in most media reports on Kobane and other battles involving female Kurdish guerrillas belies the reality that women have often participated in organized political violence, including serving on the frontlines of many previous rebellions. While the women fighting on behalf of the various armed Kurdish factions in the region have perhaps received a disproportionate share of media attention in recent years, they are not unique.
While the direct participation of women in armed rebellion is uncommon in a comparative sense, numerous armed resistance movements fighting in different regions of the world have sent thousands of women into combat during contemporary civil wars, insurgencies, and terrorist campaigns. Across these groups, however, the scope and scale of women’s participation varies substantially. Many estimates suggest that women made up at least a quarter of the combat forces of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC), the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist) (CPN-M), the Revolutionary United Front (RUF), the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF), and Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional (FMLN). Many other contemporary guerilla movements, including the Nicaraguan Contras, the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army (ZANLA), the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA), and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), had smaller numbers of female fighters within their ranks. A larger number of terrorist and rebel groups have also sporadically employed female members as assassins, saboteurs, suicide bombers, or in other acts of clandestine violence.
Nor is women’s participation in rebel groups (and the attention it generates in the media) strictly a phenomenon associated with contemporary armed rebellions. News reports from the time suggest that hundreds of women fought for Anarchist, Communist, and Republican forces during the Spanish Civil War (Lines 2012; Nash 1995) and female fighters were present in the Greek and Yugoslav Partisan forces during World War II and in the subsequent Greek Civil War (Batinic 2015; Poulos 2008). Thus, female combatants are neither a new phenomena nor one that is specific to any given culture, society, or world region.
Despite the participation of thousands of women in various armed resistance movements, rebellions, terrorist organizations, and guerrilla groups during the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, women represent only a small minority of the overall number of fighters involved in civil conflicts. Precise data are scant, but recent efforts to estimate women’s participation in armed resistance movements suggest that fewer than a third deploy women in combat positions (Henshaw 2016a, 2017; Thomas and Bond 2015; Wood and Thomas 2017).1 Consequently, while female fighters are not extraordinary per se, they nonetheless deviate from the historical norm. Most commonly, rebel combat forces—not to mention those of state militaries—comprise almost exclusively men. Women, to the extent that they are present in the organization at all, most commonly occupy positions in which they provide care, comfort, support, and encouragement to the male warriors: roles that generally mirror prevailing societal norms and cultural expectations.
The frequent absence of women from the frontlines of most rebellions is not surprising. The exclusion of women from organized political violence is a reflection of deeply embedded norms regarding men’s and women’s roles and duties in society. The battlefield is traditionally perceived as a “man’s game,” and military organizations exist as heavily gendered spaces that both encourage and reward masculine characteristics of aggression and dominance (Baaz and Stern 2009; Wood and Toppelberg 2017, 624). Women are therefore typically viewed as ill suited to the physical and psychological rigors of combat; moreover, their participation in war is often seen as inconsistent with—if not a direct challenge to—traditional military culture as well as prevailing social values. Indeed, as I explain in more detail below, deeply embedded gender norms and gender-based divisions of labor that ubiquitously link women to motherhood, innocence, and passivity and men to physical aggression and dominance appear to serve as the primary explanation for the limited participation of women in organized political violence (see J. Goldstein 2001).
While the biases of individual rebel leaders and prevailing societal norms often suppress the recruitment of female fighters, obedience to social norms and strict adherence to gender-based divisions of labor are often at odds with the realities of armed rebellion. Embracing these norms does not necessarily make for good guerrilla strategy. Given the asymmetric nature of most contemporary civil conflicts, rebels often find themselves poorly positioned to exclude willing recruits, regardless of their gender. Thus, incorporating women into the group’s combat force arguably represents a rational response by rebel leaders to the strategic realities of armed rebellion against the (typically) militarily superior forces of the incumbent regime. The tension between embedded social norms/gendered beliefs and wartime resource pressures represents the dilemma inherent in rebels leaders’ decision to recruit female fighters and deploy them in combat. Specifically, expanding the pool of potential recruits helps ameliorate rebel resource constrains. Yet, creating opportunities for women to directly participate in the production of violence often violates extant social norms and may represent a direct challenge to the social order—an outcome that can itself impose substantial costs on the movement.
I devote a significant portion of this book to understanding how rebel leaders navigate this decision and how they attempt to reconcile these competing forces. More broadly, I consider why some rebel movements ultimately incorporate women into their fighting forces while others persist in excluding them. In addition to investigating rebel leaders’ motives for female recruitment, I also consider the strategic implications of this decision for the rebellion. Particularly, I investigate how the presence of female combatants can, under some circumstances, provide various benefits to the movements that elect to recruit them. These benefits include both the role that female combatants play in ameliorating resource demands, which I argue is a primary factor in their recruitment, but also a number of additional strategic benefits that armed resistance movements often appear to realize only once they have already begun to recruit female fighters into the their armed wing. These benefits largely center on the potential roles that female combatants (and their images) play in rebel efforts to secure international and domestic support for the group and its goals.
Summary of Main Arguments
The main arguments of the book are presented in two parts. I focus attention first on leaders’ motives for female recruitment. In order to explain variations in the presence and prevalence of female combatants across rebel movements, I follow recent studies (e.g., Thomas and Bond 2015) that privilege “demand-side” explanations of women’s participation in political violence. As such, the arguments developed in chapter 1 focus on understanding the conditions under which rebel leaders are willing to transgress or challenge existing gender norms by recruiting women into the armed wing of the organization and deploying them in combat roles. While acknowledging the importance of examining women’s motives for joining an armed group, I assume that the leadership of the movement ultimately determines the recruitment strategy it adopts. In other words, I assume that rebel leaders act as gatekeepers in the recruitment process, and thus female fighters only exist when rebel leaders explicitly decide to train, arm, and deploy women in combat roles.
The overarching argument I make in the first chapter of the book is that rebel leaders are more likely to incorporate female fighters into the movement when they prioritize the potential strategic contributions of female fighters over the maintenance (or restoration) of traditional gender norms. I argue that the interaction of strategic and ideological factors shapes this decision. First, the severity of the resource demands faced by rebel leaders determines their “demand” for female fighters. As resource demands increase, such as during periods of intense fighting or following substantial troop losses, rebel groups become more likely to employ women in combat roles. Second, as previous studies demonstrate (e.g., Wood and Thomas 2017), the political ideology a group adopts strongly influences its baseline willingness to entertain the option of recruiting female combatants to meet resource demands. Leaders of rebel groups that seek to overturn existing social hierarchies and espouse gender equality (e.g., Marxist-oriented groups) are likely to be the least reluctant to employ female combatants and least sensitive to the potential costs of doing so, while those that seek to reinforce these norms (e.g., fundamentalist religious groups) are typically highly resistant to the notion of deploying women in combat because doing so is anathema to their beliefs and the values held by the constituents upon which the group relies for support.
While resource demands and ideology exert independent effects on the likelihood that rebel leadership opts to recruit female fighters, the latter exerts an important conditioning effect on the former. Specifically, while rebel groups espousing nonreligious ideologies become increasingly likely to recruit female combatants as conflict costs increase, fundamentalist and orthodox religious movements are comparatively less susceptible to these pressures. I argue that this reluctance results because the leaders of such movements perceive that any benefits resulting from the ability of female combatants to ameliorate resource constraints are offset by the severe costs associated with transgressing embedded social norms by deploying women in combat roles. Thus, even as resource demands mount, leaders of rebellions espousing fundamentalist religious ideologies generally refrain from recruiting female combatants. And even when they do recruit women for combat, they are likely to do so only in small numbers and to deploy them in only vary limited roles (e.g., as suicide bombers).
In the second chapter, I consider the strategic implications of rebel leaderships’ decisions to recruit females. I begin by extending the strategic arguments outlined earlier in the book. Specifically, I argue that the decision to recruit female fighters results in a substantial expansion of the pool of potential fighters available to the movement. Consistent with the strategic logic that motivated the initial decision to recruit them, incorporating female combatants increases the number of troops available to the rebel group, thereby helping it to ameliorate its conflict-induced resource demands. I then consider additional strategic benefits potentially provided by the visible presence of women in the ranks. Drawing on previous research examining media coverage of female combatants and anecdotal evidence regarding the ways in which rebel groups utilize female combatants in their propaganda materials, I argue that rebel movements often highlight the presence of female fighters in their ranks as a strategy of domestic and international resource mobilization.
These benefits accrue through various mechanisms. First, the presence of female combatants spurs domestic recruitment by shaming reluctant young men into joining the rebellion and inducing sympathy among the local population. By a related mechanism, group efforts to highlight female combatants can induce resource mobilization among diaspora communities, who may feel guilty about “allowing” female combatants to fight a liberation war on their behalf. Second, because observers are more likely to associate men with aggression and violence and women with victimhood, peace, and compassion, the presence of female combatants is both novel and highly salient to domestic and international audiences. The novelty and salience of female fighters increases audience attention to the group and its goals. Additionally, these associations subtly but positively influence audience attitudes toward the movement. The presence of female fighters therefore represents one aspect of a group’s efforts to construct a more positive narrative to counter government efforts to delegitimize it. To the extent these efforts are successful, rebel movements that employ female combatants and intentionally highlight their contributions to the cause may ultimately prove more effective at securing support from transnational advocacy networks and other external patrons. Success in mobilizing both domestic and international support is critical to the survival and success of a movement. Consequently, female fighters can play important roles in a group’s ability to achieve its political and military objectives.
Definitions and Scope of the Arguments
The arguments I put forth here focus principally on the factors contributing to the prevalence of female fighters in civil conflicts and the impact of female combatants on the rebellions in which they fight. In order to develop a tractable theoretical argument relating to leaders’ decisions to recruit female combatants I make several simplifying assumptions about “gender” and about the role of traditional gender norms in shaping actors’ attitudes and behaviors. Before proceeding, it is therefore helpful to define several key terms used throughout the manuscript and define and discuss the scope (and limitations) of the primary arguments.
By women and female I mean individuals who are biologically female and possess female primary sexual characteristics. I therefore treat the biological sex of these individuals as a given trait that is observable to others within their society, most importantly by the leadership of the rebel organizations that might choose to recruit them. I acknowledge the important distinctions between sex and gender, the former being biologically determined and the latter being a social and cultural construction. Moreover, I recognize that gender is a complex, multidimensional concept and that there are inherent problems and limitations associated with assuming either sexual or gender binaries. A critical examination of the construction and meaning of gender within armed groups is a fascinating and important topic;2 however, it falls outside of the scope of this project. Nonetheless, gender and gender norms play a critical role in shaping armed groups’ and individuals’ perspectives on the role of women in armed combat.
I use the terms fighters and combatants interchangeably. Herein, both refer to women to whom a rebel organization provides military training and weapons and whom they at least occasionally deploy in combat activities against enemy forces. This includes women employed in frontline combat, female suicide bombers, assassins, and female auxiliaries or members of civil defense forces who might be called upon to participate in combat when the situation demands. It excludes women who serve in other capacities such as fundraisers, recruiters, couriers, or informants but do not engage directly in organized violence on behalf of an organization. It also excludes women who spontaneously engage in acts of violence in support of the organization or its goals without the direct permission or authority of the group’s leadership. I focus principally on combatants/fighters as opposed to women occupying support roles and other females associated with armed groups (camp attendants, “war wives,” etc.)3 for two primary reasons. First, the former category represents the most substantial and most observable deviation from the historical norm while the latter is much less conspicuous and more commonly encountered. Second, the motivations for rebels to deploy women in combat roles versus support roles are likely to substantially differ. Specifically, recruiting women to cook, care for wounded soldiers, or even carry weapons and war materials does not represent a fundamental challenge to traditional gender norms in the same way that training women to fight and sending them into battle with the intention of killing enemy troops generally does.
While I primarily seek to explain the prevalence of women in combat roles, it is important to note that women perform a number of important (often critical) duties within many rebel organizations. Individuals who serve as medical personnel, cooks, radio operators, truck drivers, weapons porters, fundraisers, recruiters, spies, couriers, safe house operators, and in other noncombat duties are just as important to the survival and success of an armed resistance movement as are the guerrilla fighters that directly engage in combat with enemy forces. Substantial numbers of women routinely serve in these integral noncombat support roles. Moreover, they are often considered to be formal members of the armed groups for which they fight, even if they never directly participate in the actual conduct of combat.4 My intention is not to diminish the importance of these roles or to ignore the contributions made by the many women who serve in them. However, fully describing the various roles women play in armed groups and theorizing on the factors that influence variations in women’s participation in these roles is beyond the scope of this book.
Finally, I define a rebel movement as an antigovernment opposition organization that uses armed force to attempt to achieve a stated set of political goals. These goals may include political reforms, the complete removal of the incumbent regime, greater autonomy for a geographic area or kinship group, complete independence from the central government, or other objectives.5 In practical terms, the group must engage in armed confrontations with government forces that result in substantial numbers of fatalities.6 This definition is broad and includes groups engaged in a variety of types of civil conflicts, including full-scale civil wars, rebellions, guerrilla wars, insurgencies, and terrorist campaigns. However, it excludes organizations engaged in strictly criminal activities that have no obvious political goals (e.g., criminal syndicates), violent groups that arise spontaneously and have no clear organizational structure (e.g., riots), groups engaged exclusively in violence against other nonstate groups (e.g., intracommunal violence and conflicts between rival militias), and organizations that do not engage in armed violence (e.g., nonviolent protest movements).
While this definition excludes many types of violent actors, these exclusions are necessary in order to develop a tractable and parsimonious theory of political violence. The different types of groups listed above have vastly different goals, interests, and organizational structures that complicate the development of a more general theory of women’s participation in social violence. The focus on rebel movements facilitates theory construction and analysis; however, it should be seen as only a starting point for understanding the conditions that lead women to join violent movements.
Women’s Participation in Armed Conflicts
Despite the comparatively limited attention the topic has received from scholars of political violence, space does not permit a thorough overview of the field’s knowledge regarding women’s participation in organized political violence.7 However, several important findings and observations that inform the arguments presented in the subsequent chapters are worth highlighting in this introductory chapter. Additionally, questions regarding women’s agency and their frequent exposure to bias and abuse in conflict environments are both normatively and theoretically important to any study of women’s participation in armed groups. I therefore devote some attention to discussing these issues in this section.
Women and Political Violence
Women are routinely stereotyped as less violent than men and, as a result, frequently assumed to be the victims of violence rather than its perpetrators. Yet, there is ample evidence that women across a range of social and cultural contexts directly engage in wartime violence. Recent studies demonstrate that rather than simply representing victims of sexual violence during war, women are sometimes perpetrators of wartime rape (Cohen 2013b, 2016; Sjoberg 2016). Women have also directly participated in other atrocities, including genocide, terrorism, and other forms of intentional civilian victimization (Bloom 2011; Sharlach 1999; Sjoberg and Gentry 2007). Previous studies likewise illustrate women’s willingness to participate in organized rebellion, occasionally in large numbers, when they are provided an opportunity to do so (Alison 2009; Coulter, Persson, and Utas 2008; Gonzalez-Perez 2008; Kampwirth 2002; Mason 1992). Finally, available evidence suggests that female combatants are a global phenomenon and sometimes emerge even within societies characterized by a high degree of patriarchy and the presence of rigid social norms (see Henshaw 2017; Thomas and Bond 2015; Wood and Thomas 2017).
Few previous studies have attempted to identify a general set of conditions conducive to the presence or absence of female fighters in rebel movements or to explain the remarkable variation in the prevalence of female combatants across armed groups. With few exceptions, existing research on this topic has focused on describing and explaining women’s participation in specific rebel movements rather than attempting to understand variations in women’s roles across groups. These studies provide important insights into women’s participation in a small number of armed movements, but they do little to explain variations in the presence and prevalence of female combatants across groups.8 More recently, a handful of cross-national analyses have begun to systematically investigate the factors that predict female participation in armed groups (e.g., Henshaw 2017; Thomas and Bond 2015; Wood and Thomas 2017). Taken together, the results of case analyses and recent cross-national research highlight a number of factors that help explain women’s participation in rebel groups.
First, previous studies have highlighted the central role that prevailing gender-based divisions of labor and the depth of women’s integration into social, economic, and political processes play in determining the likelihood of women’s participation in armed resistance movements. Based on his extensive survey of literature, Joshua Goldstein (2001) concludes that deeply embedded gender norms offer perhaps the most powerful explanation of women’s general exclusion from armed combat. Linda Reif (1986, 150) similarly asserts that the patriarchal attitudes used to legitimate women’s relegation to domestic roles during peacetime also inhibit women’s participation in guerrilla movements. More recent statistically analyses of women’s participation in rebel movements also find that female fighters are more common among rebel movements in conflicts occurring in states in which women enjoyed greater prewar economic opportunities and social status (Thomas and Wood 2018). Importantly, there is also evidence that factors that weaken traditional gender norms—including those that are endogenous to the conflict—can create opportunities for women to participate in armed rebellions. David Mason (1992), for instance, argues that the combination of increasing economic vulnerability, rural-urban migration, and opportunities to engage with grassroots political movements facilitated women’s participation in Central American revolutions. Consequently, while prewar gender norms appear to influence the odds of women’s participation in armed rebellions, they are not immutable. Nor do they necessarily prevent women from joining rebel movements.
Previous studies have also linked women’s participation in armed groups to the ideologies and objectives of the armed movements for which they fight. Like men, women appear to mobilize in support of a range of ideologies. However, existing studies find that groups advocating for economic redistribution (Henshaw 2016b, 2017), those that espouse gender equality (Thomas and Bond 2015), and rebel movements that embrace Marxist-oriented ideologies (Wood and Thomas 2017) are comparatively more likely to include female combatants. Case studies of the FMLN and Sandinista rebellions also suggest that the groups’ Marxist agendas appealed to many women and encouraged their recruitment (Kampwirth 2002; Reif 1986; Viterna 2013). This is perhaps not surprising since challenging existing social hierarchies and advancing women’s rights is often an important aspect of Marxist movement goals. Yet, support for fundamentalist Islamist ideology, which typically seeks to impose or reaffirm traditional gender-based divisions of labor, appears central to women’s participation in movements such as Hamas, Al-Qaeda, and the Caucus Emirate (Chechen rebellion), including their decisions to become suicide bombers (Bloom 2011; Cragin and Daly 2009; Von Knop 2007).9
Similarly, despite the frequent association between nationalist ideology and patriarchal attitudes, armed groups espousing nationalist ideologies have successfully motivated many women to join armed their movement and to engage in violence on their behalf (Alison 2009; Hamilton 2007; Parashar 2011; Speckhard 2008). Thus, group advocacy for the advancement of women’s rights and gender equality do not represent necessary conditions for female recruitment; nor is their absence an inherent deterrent to women’s support for an armed movement. As I discuss more thoroughly in chapter 1, ideology is indeed central to a group’s decision to utilize female combatants because it shapes both the leaders’ individual perspectives on the appropriate wartime roles of women as well as their willingness to transgress local gender norms by recruiting women. Particularly, it shapes rebel leaders’ perceptions of the viability of recruiting women as a way to manage acute human resource constraints.
An often overlooked but arguably critically important observation made by much of the previous literature on this topic is that men and women often share very similar motives for joining armed groups. Ideological commitment has long been linked to men’s willingness to join armed movements. Yet, as I have noted, political beliefs are also an important driver of women’s support for armed groups, including their willingness to transgress social norms by directly participating in violence. In addition, as with male recruits, for female recruits pre-existing political networks represent important conduits through which they enter violent political organizations (Eggert 2018; Kampwirth 2002; Mason 1992; Parkinson 2013; Viterna 2013). Personal exposure to repressive state violence or violence directed against friends or family members also appears to encourage men as well as women to join armed groups (Eggert 2018; Mason 1992; Speckhard 2008; Viterna 2013).10 Concerns for personal physical security as well as a desire to seek revenge against the perpetrators of such violence are therefore motivations for recruitment shared by both men and women. While few systematic comparisons of men’s and women’s reasons for participation in rebellion exist, the available evidence suggests that existing theories of mobilization apply to female fighters as well.
Lastly, a handful of recent studies have articulated the possible strategic motives associated with group decisions to recruit and deploy female combatants. Such studies contend that rebel groups rely on female fighters because they are better able to blend into the civilian population and to avoid the scrutiny of security forces, allowing them to conduct more effective and more lethal clandestine operations and terrorist attacks (e.g., Bloom 2011; Cunningham 2003; Hamilton 2007, 108–109). Quantitative analyses find partial support for this claim, showing a strong positive relationship between a group’s decision to use terrorist tactics and the presence of female fighters within its ranks (e.g., Thomas and Bond 2015). Other systematic studies provide some evidence of the superior lethality of female suicide bombers (O’Rourke 2009). Consequently, rebel groups may view female combatants as a strategic asset, at least under some circumstances. Despite this claim, to my knowledge, no studies have attempted to systematically examine the influence of female combatants on the groups’ likelihood of achieving strategic successes or their ability to accomplish broader political and military objectives.
Women’s Agency in Armed Rebellions
In studies of women’s roles in armed resistance movements, the agency of the actors represents a normatively and theoretically important question. Agency is a complex concept that is often poorly defined, poorly conceptualized, or completely ignored in studies of armed conflict. Herein, I understand agency as the ways in which individuals navigate their social environment, including the various tactics they adopt to survive and potentially thrive in that environment.11 While I do not explicitly engage the question of women’s agency during conflict in this book, it is worth discussing briefly here in order highlight its relevance to the study.
Many female fighters, especially girl soldiers, are victims of abduction or forced recruitment (see Coulter, Persson, and Utas 2008; MacKenzie 2012; McKay 2004). However, coercion is a recruitment tactic employed by many armed groups, and it affects both men and women (see Eck 2014).12 Similarly, like men, many other women willingly join armed groups as a way to maximize their chances of survival and avoid abuse from government or rebel forces. Still others join rebel movements because doing so provides them with a greater range of opportunities than they enjoyed before the outbreak of the conflict (Coulter, Persson, and Utas 2008; Geisler 2004, 49). Yet, because agency is highly dependent on specific social situations (Utas 2005, 407), the manner in which agency is experienced and the modes of social navigation often differ markedly between men and women. Owing to the different societal expectations and norms imposed upon them, women are often presented with different sets of opportunities and therefore adopt different tactics for survival, resistance, and empowerment during wartime. Women therefore often negotiate their relationships with armed actors and even their positions within armed groups in ways that are distinct from men (Denov and Gervais 2007; O’Gorman 2011; Utas 2005).
Female fighters—even those who are abducted or forcibly recruited—are not simply victims devoid of agency (see Annan et al. 2009; Coulter 2009; McKay 2005; Utas 2005). In developing my arguments about women’s participation in armed resistance movements, I therefore assume that (potential) female fighters represent (broadly) strategic actors attempting to navigate a complex and highly uncertain environment. However, I fully recognize that gender norms and expectations influence other actors’ (e.g., rebels and civilians) attitudes regarding women’s roles during conflict and that these factors often circumscribe or augment the opportunities available to women during wartime (Coulter 2009).
Gender Bias and Abuse in the Ranks
While asserting the nominal agency of female fighters, I nevertheless acknowledge that women participating in armed groups often experience gender bias and mistreatment. Given the hypermasculinity inculcated in the ranks of most organized armed groups, women combatants are often viewed by male troops as outsiders, interlopers, and/or unfit for the rigors of warfare. At minimum, these attitudes routinely result in gender-based discrimination, subordination, and ridicule. In some cases, gender bias and misogyny in the ranks can expose female combatants to severe mistreatment and physical and psychological abuse.
The most systematic manifestation of gender bias within the ranks is the persistence of gender-based divisions of labor within armed groups, even among those organizations that advocate for gender equality. While most armed groups include women in some formal or informal capacity, most of these women serve in noncombat support roles. Comparatively few women participate in combat roles. Moreover, available evidence suggests that only about a quarter of rebel movements active during the post–Cold War period include women in military leadership positions of any sort (Henshaw 2016a). Analyses of women’s participation in the Yugoslav Partisan forces suggest that similar gender-based biases in leadership were also present in pre–Cold War armed groups, including those that espoused gender egalitarianism (Jancar 1981, 153–154). In her in-depth study of women in the FMLN, Jocelyn Viterna (2013, 132) observes that while some female members of the organization participated in combat and leadership positions, women were disproportionally represented in support roles in the organization, including cook, radio operator, medic, and so on.13 Despite ZANLA’s public rhetoric of gender equality, mobilization was a gendered process, and sex-based biases and social attitudes contributed to a similar gender-based division of labor in the group (Kesby 1996, 569–570; Lyons 2004, 187–190). Likewise, female members of the Marxist New People’s Army (NPA) in the Philippines have complained that they are expected to take on both revolutionary responsibilities as combatants and domestic responsibilities as caregivers (Santos and Santos 2010, 274–275). This “double burden” of serving in combat but being forced to perform “women’s work” such as cooking, cleaning, and caregiving was also imposed on the milicianas who fought for the anti-Fascist forces in the Spanish Civil War and on female fighters of the Yugoslav partisan forces (Batinic 2015, 148–149; Lines 2009, 170–171, 181–182). These patterns are likely repeated in most other rebel organizations. Consequently, as several scholars have previously noted, peacetime gender hierarchies are often replicated in wartime organizations (Luciak 2001a, 11–13, 18; Reif 1986).14
More severe forms of gender-based coercion, mistreatment, and abuse also frequently occur within armed groups (Coulter, Persson, and Utas 2008; Krystalli 2016; McKay 2005; Mazurana et al. 2002). Recent reports suggest that FARC closely controls and monitors women’s behaviors, including forcing some women and girls (as young as twelve years old) to use contraception or have abortions (Krystalli 2016; O’Keeffe 2008; Stanski 2006). Women serving in armed groups also commonly face pressures to engage in sexual relationships with men or exchange sexual favors for protection or other benefits. For example, Mary Nash (1993, 280–281) notes that many female fighters in the ranks of Republican and Anarchist forces in the Spanish Civil War complained of being harassed by their male comrades and voiced fears of the difficulties they faced if these sexual advances were refused. Female fighters in the FARC have similarly reported that they were expected to provide sexual services to male combatants (Herrera and Porch 2008, 610). In Liberia and Sierra Leone, many female fighters also served as “bush wives” or “sex slaves” for male commanders during at least some point in their tenure with the rebel movement, often as a means to protect themselves or secure a better standard of living (Coulter, Persson, and Utas 2008, 16; Coulter 2009). Josephine Nhongo-Simbanegavi (2000) likewise notes that despite the group’s stated commitment to the advancement of women’s rights, female ZANLA recruits often experienced sexual abuse or manipulation at the hands of male guerrillas. Thus, even in armed movements in which women serve as frontline combatants and attain leadership positions, female members and female fighters often become victims of abuse, rape, and sexual exploitation.
While the victimization of female combatants is commonplace during armed conflict, the severity and frequency of abuse appears to vary substantially across groups. Interviews with former female combatants and case studies of women’s involvement in some rebel movements often indicate that the women in these movements felt that they enjoyed the respect of their male colleagues and were treated comparatively equally to male combatants. For instance, according to an assessment of gender relations in the FMLN camps written during the final years of the war, women were no longer the servants of men but had become their comrades, and rigid gender barriers had significantly weakened (Carter et al. 1989, 127). Similarly, Viterna (2012, 152–153) asserts that while many scholars have portrayed the rebel camps as places where women were subjected to abuse and harassment, the women in her study sample “resoundingly dismissed” such claims. Rather, they described the guerrilla group as “a family” and insisted that men typically treated female combatants with respect. Angela Veale (2003) similarly reports that sexual abuse in the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) was rare. According to Gisela Geisler (2004, 54–55), female combatants in the South West African People’s Liberation Organization (SWAPO) and ZANLA also spoke passionately about the respect male cadre gave them and asserted that in the ranks men and women worked “shoulder to shoulder” and gender was not central to their relationships. Karen Turner (1998, 135) similarly notes that the war in Vietnam eroded gender boundaries in part by highlighting the similar struggles men and women faced: “In the jungles, the tunnels, the clinics, when Vietnamese women turned their gaze toward men, they saw not powerful patriarchal figures but comrades trying to survive with dignity and sometime losing the struggle.” The level of mistreatment experienced by female combatants is likely related to the organizational structures and rules of conduct adopted by the rebel leadership. Female former LTTE fighters contend that gender relations in the ranks were generally positive and abuse was rare, partly because the group’s leadership imposed strict codes of behavior and punished transgression (Herath 2012, 110–111). Numerous other rebel groups have employed similar efforts to manage gender relationships within the ranks, including prohibitions on sexual or romantic relationships (Taylor 1999, 63–65; Viterna 2013, 154–157).15
As this discussion suggests, the experiences of women in armed groups, particularly with respect to their perceptions of equality with male combatants, likely vary both across as well as within groups. Despite some efforts to explore these issues, there has been little effort to systematically explain the factors that influence women’s experiences with abuse and mistreatment within armed groups or to explain cross-group variations in the frequency or severity of such abuses. By contrast, a wealth of recent studies has sought to understand the factors that contribute to armed groups’ use of sexual violence against civilians. While some studies have asserted the causal role of structural gender inequality in wartime sexual violence (Davies and True 2015), the majority of recent studies have linked variations in such behaviors to group-level organizational and institutional factors. For instance, Dara Kay Cohen (2013a) asserts that rape represents a strategy through which rebel groups that lack internal cohesion and dense internal social ties attempt to forge bonds among combatants. Empirically, groups that rely on abduction or coercive recruitment strategies are more likely to engage in wartime rape.
Other related studies highlight the important role that internal group norms, socialization processes, and the specific institutions created by rebel movements play in determining the frequency with which troops engage in rape and sexual violence (e.g., E. J. Wood 2006, 2009). Amelia Hoover Green (2016) argues that rebel groups that cultivate strong internal cohesion via political education and other institutionalized socialization processes are less likely to engage in sexual violence. Further, she shows that rebel groups with Communist ideologies, which she argues are most likely to possess the features she identifies as causal mechanisms, are comparatively less likely to commit wartime rape than other groups. Taken together, these studies suggest leaders can exert substantial control over the level of sexual violence their troops commit. However, their ability to control such violence is often dependent on the investments they made early in conflict to developing shared norms, command hierarchies, and disciplinary mechanisms. Notably, this research also demonstrates the important ways in which group ideology can shape rebel behavior and group attitudes toward women. I return to this important point in chapter 1.
Gender Norms and Armed Conflict
The arguments that I put forth in subsequent chapters are largely predicated on the observation that societal gender norms exert a substantial influence on women’s roles during periods of armed conflict. While I have briefly alluded to the role of societal gender norms and gender-based divisions in determining the presence of female combatants in rebel movements, it is useful to more fully elaborate on this point before I proceed. This discussion emphasizes the historical and cross-cultural association of men (and masculinity) with violence and warfare and women (and femininity) with innocence, virtue, and peace. It also highlights the manner in which war often reifies gender stereotypes and reinforces gender-based divisions of labor. During periods of violent armed conflict, men therefore face strong social pressures to conform to traditional masculine roles and participate in combat while women are discouraged from undertaking such activities and are instead expected to perform more traditionally feminine roles such as providing care, support, and encouragement to male fighters. These social expectations have implications for rebel leaders’ attitudes regarding the recruitment of women and their deployment in combat. The countervailing influences of these gender norms/biases and wartime resource demands faced by rebel leaders represent the core tension I address in chapter 1.
Though exceptions can be easily found, across diverse cultures and time periods the vast majority of warriors have been male.16 Joshua Goldstein (2001, 10), for instance, asserts that women likely represent less than 1 percent of warriors throughout recorded history. However, the frequency of these exceptions varies across different cultures and historical periods. In recent years, the frequency of women’s participation in national armed forces has increased, particularly in Western states. As of 2017, a dozen countries (representing roughly 6 percent of all nation-states) permitted women to serve in frontline combat positions in their national military forces (Fisher 2013; Keating 2012).17 Yet in all cases, female combatants represent only a very small fraction of a state’s total combat forces. Available estimates suggest that women constitute somewhere between 2 and 7 percent of combat troops in the military forces of those states that allow them to serve (see Alexander and Stewart 2015; Ben-David 2017; Mulrine 2013; Phippen 2016). Moreover, while rebel movements are comparatively more likely to deploy women in combat (see J. Goldstein 2001, 77–79), the prevalence of female combatants in the ranks of these groups is still quite low in most cases. The majority of rebel groups exclude women from combat, and in only about one in five rebel groups does the number of female fighters exceed 5 percent of the group’s total combat forces (Wood and Thomas 2017). Despite the important contributions women have made (and continue to make) in many armed groups, the battlefield represents a heavily gendered, intensely masculinized environment.
Explanations for the overall scarcity of female combatants vary and include essentialist arguments regarding innate sex-based preferences over the use of violence, physical and cognitive differences between men and women, and the influence of socialization and cultural expectations. A few feminist scholars, for example, have asserted that women are inherently more opposed to war and resistant to militarism compared to men. Virginia Woolf ([1938] 1963, 6) appeared to adopt this perspective when she wrote that for men there is “some glory, some necessity, some satisfaction in fighting that [women] have never felt or enjoyed.” Sara Ruddick (1989), writing more than half a century later, embraced a similar view when she asserted that women are inherently more pacifistic than men and that this (comparatively) more peaceful nature largely stems from their biological and social roles as mothers. However, these essentialist arguments generally fail to explain why many women are willing participate in armed groups when provided the opportunity to do so.
Differences in physical capabilities offer a partial explanation for the dearth of female combatants. Joshua Goldstein (2001), for instance, finds some evidence that sex-based differences in average size and strength may exert a significant deterrent effect on women’s participation in military forces. More systematic and focused studies of women’s performance in combat actual units also acknowledge important physical differences between men and women in terms of strength and stamina (Epstein et al. 2013; Finestone et al. 2014), and some studies suggest that all-male combat units generally perform better than mixed-gender units (Peralta 2015).18 However, other analyses conclude that at least a subset of the female population is capable of meeting the physical standards militaries establish for combat units and can successfully perform combat duties. They further suggest that the integration of women into combat units is logistically feasible and does not substantially degrade unit morale or performance (e.g., Cawkill et al. 2009; Epstein et al. 2013; Finestone et al. 2014; UK Ministry of Defense 2014). The recent graduation of two women from the U.S. Army’s grueling Ranger School further suggests that at least some women can meet even the most rigorous physical and mental standards expected of soldiers (Lamothe 2016). These findings therefore undercut the explanatory power of the capabilities difference argument. While women are smaller and less physically strong on average, reducing the number of women physically capable of enduring the rigors of armed combat, most populations will include a substantial number of women who would otherwise appear physically qualified to become frontline combatants.
Sociocultural factors likely play the most significant role in the gendering of warfare. Joshua Goldstein’s (2001) extensive investigation of the relevant literature leads him to conclude that embedded gender norms within most societies orient men toward war and conflict and women toward maternal roles. Moreover, women play a critical role in the process of cultivating male warriors by providing support, encouragement, and rewards to men who conform to these gendered expectations and castigating, shunning, and shaming men who deviate from them. Due to their powerful influence on the moral, social, and psychological development of their children, women play a key role in raising boys and girls that fulfill their expected roles. Ultimately, he asserts that the “cultural molding of tough, brave men, who feminize their enemies to encode domination” represents the most compelling explanation for the near-universal gendering of war roles (2001, 406). The assertion that the exclusion of women from combat results from sociocultural factors rather than innate physical or psychological differences between men and women largely dovetails with longstanding feminist critiques of gender and warfare. Principally, the general absence of women from the battlefield—as well as frequent attempts to erase or minimize the contributions of the relatively few female fighters that might have participated—is a reflection of deeply embedded social and cultural norms regarding the “appropriate” division of labor between genders. As Jacklyn Cock (1991, 132) asserts, divisions of labor along gender lines in state militaries reflect the cultural norms of the society and current ideas of the proper roles for men and women in the society.
These attitudes appear to intensify during war. Despite the varying rigidity of gender norms, differing perspectives on women’s rights, and wide discrepancies in women’s access to educational and occupational opportunities across societies, war often evokes highly gendered attitudes and reifies traditional gender roles. As Jean Elshtain (1987, 4) asserts, “in time of war, real men and women … take on, in cultural memory and narrative, the personas of Just Warriors and Beautiful Souls. Man is construed as violent, whether eagerly and inevitably or reluctantly and tragically, woman nonviolent, offering succor and compassion.” These themes and images are contrived, and they do not necessarily reflect the reality of women’s and men’s identities or actions during war. Yet, they serve—intentionally or inadvertently—to reaffirm the female position of innocent (and often virtuous) noncombatants and the male role of valiant protectors and warriors. Furthermore, in this narrative women serve not only as innocent potential victims of war in need of protection by (and ironically from) men but also as the reward offered to male protectors for dutifully risking their lives in war (Elshtain 1987). Drawing on this earlier work, Laura Sjoberg (2010, 55) therefore contends that women are thus at once the “object of fighting and the just purpose for war.” In this sense, this imagined essentialist distinction between violent (but valiant) men and innocent, pacifist women has the effect of justifying the act of war itself.
Within the Just Warrior–Beautiful Soul narrative, men and women are expected to play opposite but mutually reinforcing roles, which ultimately function to reaffirm the traditional gender hierarchies and divisions of labor.19 Moreover, the performance of these highly gendered roles is intended to facilitate and sustain the mobilization of the population during war. Specifically, social pressures to affirm their masculinity encourage men to risk their lives and health in defense of the country; parallel social norms and expectations press women to encourage and reward men who accept their masculine obligation and to shame men who seek to evade those obligations (De Pauw 1998, 19; J. Goldstein 2001, 272–274; Sjoberg 2014, 32–33). Interestingly, while this narrative normally assumes that femininity is an inherent trait of women, resulting in women being more pacifistic, compassionate, and nurturing, men must overtly demonstrate their masculinity and earn their manhood through concrete actions, such as by participating in armed combat.20
Political organizations and national governments have historically been acutely aware of the power such gender tropes have in shaping prospective (male) recruits’ attitudes toward participating in armed conflict on behalf of the state. Wartime recruitment propaganda illustrates the ways in which state militaries and governments manipulate the gender narrative summarized above in order to encourage men to fight threats at home or enemies in foreign lands (Rupp 1978; Shover 1975; Sims 2000). For example, in England during the World War I and briefly during World War II, groups of women handed out white feathers to British men who had not enlisted in the military. The intention and symbolism of these actions by the women of the “White Feather Brigades” was clear: to remind men of those whom they fought to defend, highlight what rewards might await the brave men who enlisted, and to label as cowards—and thus ineligible for such rewards—those men who evaded their masculine obligations (Gullace 1997, 182–193).21 Similarly, during the Spanish Civil War, Republican activists and politicians urged women to publically denounce and shame men who ignored the call to arms (Nash 1993, 271). The mere presence of female combatants has also served as way to shame reluctant men into volunteering for combat. For instance, the Czarist government of Russia formed a female battalion during World War I largely for this purpose, a tactic that appears to have succeeded (J. Goldstein 2001, 73–74). Anecdotal evidence from a variety of cases, including civil wars in El Salvador, Ethiopia, Turkey, and Vietnam, likewise illustrates that female guerrillas have often proven effective at encouraging, cajoling, or shaming men into joining rebel movements (Donnell 1967; Marcus 2007; Tareke 2009; Viterna 2013).
From this discussion, I draw several assumptions on which I base the arguments that follow in this book. First, historically and across disparate cultures, war is viewed as an overtly masculine pursuit (e.g., J. Goldstein 2001). Second, despite the recognition that women can perform admirably in combat, deeply embedded gender norms in most societies position men to assume the role of fighters and defenders and women to act as caregivers and victims. Moreover, warfare serves to reify preexisting gender beliefs, hierarchies, and norms, pushing men and women to assume their traditional gender roles. Third, in most societies, the presence of female combatants represents a dramatic departure from existing gender norms. Because of this, the decision to recruit women and deploy them in combat is not one that rebel leadership undertakes lightly. Specifically, both the gender biases of a group’s leadership and the possibility of alienating relevant constituencies influence this decision. Understanding how these factors shape rebel leaders’ (and audiences’) perspectives on women’s participation in political violence helps to highlight the relevant constraints and incentives that shape leaders’ decisions to recruit female fighters or to exclude women from combat.
Plan of the Book
Despite being underrepresented in most rebel movements and, in many cases, rendered invisible in the aftermath of the conflict by both the international community and by the movements for which they fought (see, e.g., McKay 2005; Mazurana et al. 2002), female combatants have been present on the frontlines of many contemporary armed conflicts. In the following chapters of this book I seek to explain why some armed resistance movements actively recruit women and deploy them in combat while others exclude female combatants, and to better understand what impact this decision ultimately has on the groups that make it. Having provided a brief introduction to the central arguments as well as a discussion of the scope of conditions and some core assumptions, I now provide a roadmap to the remaining chapters.
In chapter 1, I develop a set of arguments to explain why some rebel movements have chosen to incorporate women into their combat forces—sometimes in substantial numbers—while others have instead excluded them. While acknowledging the importance of understanding why women choose to join rebellions, I focus my attention in this chapter primarily on explaining the conditions under which rebel leaders become willing to ignore traditional gender norms (and their own gender biases) in order to create opportunities for female supporters to assume combat roles within the armed movement. I argue that a combination of strategic and ideological factors shapes a rebel leader’s decision to incorporate women into the group’s fighting forces and deploy women in combat: (1) the severity of the conflict and the corresponding resource commitment necessary for the rebel organization to maintain its war against the incumbent regime, (2) the group’s ideology, and, finally, (3) the interaction of these factors. I focus particularly on the way that group ideology conditions the relationship between resource demands and female recruitment.
I consider the potential strategic benefits associated with the decision to recruit female fighters in chapter 2. The arguments therein represent a logical extension of those proposed in chapter 1. I argue that female fighters potentially benefit the groups that employ them in multiple ways. Consistent with the logic outlined in chapter 1, the leadership’s decision to recruit women directly expands the supply of available troops, thus easing human resource constraints that might otherwise adversely impact the group’s ability to achieve its goals. In addition, I discuss the ways in which rebel groups utilize female combatants in their propaganda efforts and the potential role that female combatants can play in assisting the group in securing support from external actors.
Chapter 3 probes the validity of the arguments put forth in chapters 1 and 2 by examining the evolutions of women’s participation and the implications of female combatants in three diverse rebellions: the PKK and its allied militias in Turkey and Syria, the LTTE in Sri Lanka, and ZANLA and ZIPRA in Rhodesia/Zimbabwe. Each case broadly corresponds to each of the arguments made in the theory chapters. Moreover, each clearly illustrates one or more of the mechanisms posed in the theory. For instance, the PKK case study helps illustrate the role of ideology in shaping leaders’ attitudes toward female combatants (and how these views evolve over time). Yet, as the other two cases demonstrate, Marxist ideology is not a necessary condition for the inclusion of female combatants. Each also highlights the importance of increasing conflict intensity and tightening resource constraints in motivating rebel leaders to incorporate women into the groups’ fighting forces. All three of the cases demonstrate how rebel groups utilize the presence of female fighters in their ranks to solicit support from external actors, including diaspora communities and transnational activist networks.
Chapters 4 and 5 present results from the quantitative analyses used to assess the hypotheses presented in the earlier chapters. In chapter 4, I introduce and provides a brief but detailed discussion of the dataset used to assess women’s participation in rebellions as well as a the quantitative tests of the hypotheses based on the arguments presented in chapter 1. The analyses provided in this chapter suggest that rebel groups engaged in conflicts that result in greater numbers of combatant deaths and causalities are more likely to recruit female combatants and more likely to include a larger proportion of female combatants than less severe conflicts. They also imply that the ideology a rebel group adopts influences the presence and prevalence of female combatants. Moreover, there is evidence that group ideology conditions the more general relationship between resource demands and female recruitment.
In chapter 5, I subject the hypotheses on the implication of female combatants presented in chapter 2 to rigorous empirical scrutiny. The results of the quantitative analyses presented in that chapter suggest that rebel organizations with a greater prevalence of female combatants field larger combat forces than their counterparts that exclude female combatants or recruit in very small numbers. This chapter also describes and presents the results from a novel survey experiment designed to assess the effects of female combatants on audience perceptions of a rebel movement. Results from this experiment suggest that the presence of female combatants in an armed group improve respondents’ overall support for the group’s goals. Finally, I present the results of analyses examining the relationship between female combatants and external support for rebel movements, particularly by transnational advocacy networks and diaspora communities. These analyses provide preliminary evidence that the presence of female combatants can influence the likelihood that a group receives external support.
The final chapter summarizes the central arguments and findings, considers their implications, and discusses their relevance to understanding the contemporary rebellions. It highlights the important—yet often underappreciated role—female fighters play in these conflicts and suggests how a better understanding of women’s participation in armed groups might contribute to additional theoretical insights into the behaviors in which armed groups engage and the strategies and tactics they employ.