Jenna Norosky’s research while affiliated with University of Massachusetts Amherst and other places

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Publications (2)


The Right to Flee the Dangers of War: Rethinking Ukraine’s Gender-Based Restriction on Civilian Men’s Freedom of Movement
  • Article

August 2024

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31 Reads

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1 Citation

Human Rights Quarterly

Jenna Norosky

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Charli Carpenter

Amid Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, the human rights community has understandably focused its attention on human rights violations committed by the Russian state, leaving the human rights implications of Ukraine’s martial law on civilians largely unexamined. This article highlights the ways Ukraine’s travel restriction on “battle-aged” civilian men has harmed three overlapping groups: civilian men, families (including women and children), and trans and nonbinary individuals. It then demonstrates that wartime policies such as this one are at odds with several areas of international human rights and humanitarian law: the right to freedom of movement, the right to conscientious objection, and the principle of respect for family life—all of which are meant to be implemented without discrimination on basis of gender. We conclude this type of gender-based law is not justified according to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights’ rules on derogation in time of national emergencies and emerging customary law and should receive greater attention by the human rights community.


Citations (1)


... A promising new avenue of research are studies that more explicitly consider how sexual violence is perceived or conceptualized by different actors and audiences and what implications this might have [17,57,87,91,92]. Scholars should continue to seek to understand how policy makers, NGOs, local activists, and the general public view these violations, and how this shapes policy and interventions, as well as research practices and data collection. ...

Reference:

Recent Advances in the Study of Conflict-Related Sexual Violence
Distinguishing between the “soldier” and the “brute”: engraving hierarchies of masculinity in conflict-related sexual violence discourse
  • Citing Article
  • May 2024

International Feminist Journal of Politics