Ambassador Lynch delivers remarks at Tradewinds 2023 Opening Ceremony.Embassy Donates 17-Seat Passenger Bus to the Palms Rehabilitation Center Guyana joins initiative that supports development of human rights programs in the Caribbean, Latin America.SOUTHCOM Commander returning to Guyana as nation hosts Tradewinds Exercise.Ambassador Lynch delivers remarks at Tradewinds 2023 Closing Ceremony.Health Advisors partner with Guyana’s Ministry of Health to strengthen COVID-19 response and public health supply chain Introduced with a foreword by Martin Scheinin, former UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Counter-Terrorism, the volume examines a wide range of gendered impacts of counter-terrorism measures that have not been theorized in the leading texts on terrorism, counter-terrorism, national security, and human rights. Through this variegated human rights lens, the authors in this volume identify the spectrum and nature of rights violations arising in the context of gendered counter-terrorism and national security practices. By integrating gender into a human rights analysis of counter-terrorism―and human rights into a gendered analysis of counter-terrorism―this volume aims to reverse this trend. This assumption has obscured the ways that women, men, and sexual minorities experience counter-terrorism. Human rights analyses of the counter-terrorism measures implemented in the aftermath of 11 September 2001 have assumed that men suffer the most―both numerically and in terms of the nature of rights violations endured. In the name of fighting terrorism, countries have been invaded wars have been waged people have been detained, rendered and tortured and campaigns for “hearts and minds” have been unleashed.
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