War through an Intersectional Lens
- Keshab GiriDetails
8 February 2026/२५ माघ २०८२ (आइतबार, दिउँसो ३ बजे)
Research Seminar Series
War through an Intersectional Lens
Keshab Giri, Lecturer in International Relations, The University of St Andrews
Abstract
The exponential growth in literature on female combatants in rebel groups so far has explored “why” women rebel, “where” women rebel, and “when” women rebel. Yet, existing literature largely assumes women combatants as a homogenous universal category having similar experiences of war and “post-war.” In this milieu, this book focuses on “how” women rebel given their multiple intersecting identities and social subjectivities. It looks at how female combatants experience war and “post-war” in public and private spheres by using intersectionality both as a theoretical framework and a methodological tool inspired by feminist research methodology to explore complex experiences of women combatants during and after the war. The book finds that female combatants’ experiences of war and “post-war,” both in public and private spheres, are conditioned by their interlocking systems of oppression and identities, such as class, caste, ethnicity, social status, educational status, and geographical location. The book makes an important contribution to the feminist International Relations literature, feminist security studies, and has significant policy implications, particularly concerning the reintegration of female combatants, peacebuilding, and the Women, Peace, and Security Agenda.
About the Speaker
Keshab Giri is a Lecturer in International Relations at The University of St Andrews. He is also a research fellow at the Women and Public Policy Program, Harvard Kennedy School (2023-24). His research interests include women combatants, intersectionality, gender and war, violent extremism, leftist insurgencies, feminist International Relations, feminist research methodology, rebel governance, and governance of intimacy in rebel groups. He is the author of War through an Intersectional Lens: Female Combatants and the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal (2025, Oxford University Press).