Interviews
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- How a Diaspora Director Talks About the “Comfort Women” Issue Through a Documentary
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The documentary film <A Boat Departed From Me Taking Me Away>, directed by Cecilia Kang, a second-generation Argentine of Korean descent, follows the journey of the protagonist, Melanie Chong, as she confronts and grows increasingly aware of the issue of the Japanese military “Comfort women.”
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- “Stop Using Women’s Bodies as Battlefields!”
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Iryna Dovhan, head of SEMA Ukraine, condemns the severe violence and suffering endured by countless women during the Ukraine-Russia war, which has persisted for over a decade.
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- Hoping for the Publication of an English Collection of Testimonials on ‘Comfort Women’ to Prevent Distortions and Expand Empathy in the International Community
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Professor Jing Williams considers her education on the “Comfort Women” issue as “a process of planting seeds for the future,” recognizing that some of her students may become advocates for women’s human rights.
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- “Teaching the ‘Comfort Women’ Issue in the U.S. Society: A Global Citizenship Education to Overcome Nation-Centrism”
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Professor Jing Williams considers her education on the “Comfort Women” issue as “a process of planting seeds for the future,” recognizing that some of her students may become advocates for women’s human rights.
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- Second “‘Comfort Women’ Litigation” Ruling Becomes “Magna Carta” of International Human Rights Law
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Attorney Sanghee Lee, the head of the Lawyers for the Democratic Society Task Force addressing the Japanese Military “Comfort Women” Issue
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- A Conversation with Stanislava Staša Zajović of Women in Black Belgrade (2)
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The feminist ethic of care entails not only taking care of myself but also extending care to the victims of crimes committed against others.
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- A Conversation with Stanislava Staša Zajović of Women in Black Belgrade (1)
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Women who dare to speak out about sexual violence experience overwhelming anxiety across various aspects of their lives.
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- A Conversation with Sue Finch of Women in Black London (3)
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The World Court of Women has held over 30 sessions since 1992, hearing from survivors of violence, conflict and war from around the world.
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- A Conversation with Sue Finch of Women in Black London (2)
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Violence, militarism and war are gendered phenomena, and peace activism, to be effective, must likewise be gender analytical and gender aware.
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- A Conversation with Sue Finch of Women in Black London (1)
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As the history of Women in Black shows, each Women in Black group has its own approach to feminist action, growing out of their local situation, but linked to each other through international theories and conferences.