RT Article T1 Relationality, culpability and consent in wartime: men's experiences of forced marriages JF International journal of transitional justice VO 11 IS 3 SP 463 OP 483 A1 Aijazi, Omer A2 Baines, Erin K. 1969- LA English UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1565083865 AB Rights-based approaches to forced marriage in wartime document forms of harm women experience, to the exclusion of men’s experiences. Such framing problematically reiterates a binary of women/men, victim/perpetrator and consent/coercion. Arguably, this delineation is useful in supporting projects of culpability and legal redress. However, what does such vocabulary obfuscate or render invisible? We draw from the experiences of men demobilized from the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) and presently living in northern Uganda to consider how relationships and social accountabilities are governed in settings of coercion. We argue that forced marriage in wartime cannot be understood without examining the multiple relationalities on which it is contingent. We broaden the remit of men’s relationships to women in the LRA to consider how men’s relations to each other and to their children shaped their experiences of marriage during the war. We conclude by reflecting on concepts of consent and culpability in coercive settings. NO Literaturhinweise K1 Bürgerkrieg K1 Kombattant K1 Mann K1 Zwangsheirat K1 Nachkriegszeit K1 Auswirkung DO 10.1093/ijtj/ijx023