
New Books Network Peace A. Medie, "Global Norms and Local Action: The Campaigns to End Violence Against Women in Africa" (Oxford UP, 2020)
Dec 8, 2025
Peace A. Medie, an associate professor in politics at the University of Bristol and author, explores the complex landscape of violence against women in post-conflict Africa. She delves into the different responses of Liberia and Côte d'Ivoire, highlighting the impact of international pressures and local movements. Medie emphasizes the importance of specialized policing and survivor-sensitive practices while sharing firsthand accounts from survivors. Her research advocates for holistic approaches, urging for domestic ownership and the necessity of women's movements in driving change.
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International Women's Justice Norm Reframes Accountability
- The international women's justice norm pushes for offender accountability and survivor-sensitive treatment through criminal justice reforms.
- Peace A. Medie shows the norm reframes gender-based violence from private/community to state responsibility requiring accountability.
Creation Versus Institutionalization Divide
- International actors (especially the UN) drive the initial creation of specialized units most effectively.
- Domestic actors and institutional conditions determine whether those units become truly institutionalized and effective.
Liberian Women's Marches Catalyzed Reform
- After Liberia's war, women staged large marches demanding justice for widespread sexual violence.
- Those protests helped push transitional leaders and the UN to respond with specialized units and reforms.


