Category Archives: English
“Authors of their Own Transitional Justice: Survivors of Wartime Sexual Violence” In Aidan Hehir, Robert Muharremi and Furtuna Sheremeti (eds.) Kosovo and the Pursuit of Justice after Large Scale Conflict. Routledge. 2021.
“Kosovo: An Art Installation That Punctured the Public Secrets of Wartime Sexual Violence” In Yifat Gutman and Jenny Wüstenberg (eds.) The Routledge Handbook of Memory Activism. Routledge. 2021.
“Gender Performance and Gendered Warriors in the Albanian Epic” (with Arbnora Dushi). In Pamela Jo Lothspeich (ed.) The Epic World. Routledge. Forthcoming.
“Kosovo: An Art Installation That Punctured the Public Secrets of Wartime Sexual Violence” In Yifat Gutman and Jenny Wüstenberg (eds.) The Routledge Handbook of Memory Activism. Routledge. 2021.
Seeking Justice for Wartime Sexual Violence in Kosovo: Voices and Silence of Women
Anna Di Lellio Program in International Relations, New York University, and The New School for Public Engagement
At different times, and for different reasons, Kosovo informal and organized women’s networks have dealt with wartime sexual violence in different ways: they have followed either a strategy of silence or one of speech. Throughout, they have struggled to disentangle gender from ethnicity, straddling the line between a deep connection with local culture and domestic and international norms and agendas. This article tells their story, which in broader terms is the story of the subjectivity of women’s rights activists—domestic and international—as it connects with the normative framework of transitional justice. The case of Kosovo shows that transitional justice meaningfully engages local actors as a human rights project sensitive to political change, more than as a “toolkit” which packages truth, reconciliation and justice with recipes for implementation. The case of Kosovo also confirms that lobbying by women’s networks is crucial to the inclusion of women’s perspectives in transitional justice, and that the exclusion of women from decision making results in a net loss for women’s concerns. I would take the argument even further, and suggest that the inclusion of women and their agendas, as well as the struggle by women’s networks for inclusion, is necessary for human rights transformation.
The Battle Of Kosovo 1389
“Once there was a Sultan l\/lurat…”Thus begins the Albanian epic on the Battle of Kosovo.‘ This is the story of Murat, a i\’loses—like leader who performs miracles for his people and is destined to die as a martyr, and Kopiliq, the daring warrior with magic powers who kills Murat.The historical event that provides
the background to this epic is Sultan l\/lurat l’s Kosovo campaign in the spring of B89, culminating in a confrontation with the coalition of Balkan forces led by the Serbian Prince Lazar
Hrcbeljanovioz Both the Sultan and the Prince were killed ina battle that apparently ended with no decisive victory in the field, or no immediate outcome, but signaled the weariness of
local forces against the Ottomans. Seventy years later the last resistance was finally overcome; Kosovo feudal lords lost their independence to the Ottomans, who established their rule over
the entire region.
Article on Srbija
Transitions
The Legendary Commander