2,233
Views
1
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Research Article

Women’s sexual and reproductive health in war and conflict: are we seeing the full picture?

ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Article: 2188689 | Received 08 Jan 2023, Accepted 04 Mar 2023, Published online: 17 Mar 2023

ABSTRACT

It is well established that women’s sexual and reproductive health (SRHR) is negatively affected by war. While global health research often emphasises infrastructure and systematic factors as key impediments to women’s SRHR in war and postwar contexts, reports from different armed conflicts indicate that women’s reproduction may be controlled both by state and other armed actors, limiting women’s choices and access to maternal and reproductive health care even when these are available. In addition, it is important to examine and trace disparities in sexual reproductive health access and uptake within different types of wars, recognising gendered differences in war and postwar contexts. Adding feminist perspectives on war to global health research explanations of how war affects women's sexual and reproductive health might then contribute to further understanding the complexity of the different gendered effects war and armed conflicts have on women’s sexual and reproductive health.

Responsible Editor Maria Nilsson

Women’s reproductive health in war and conflict

It is well established that reproductive insecurities contribute to higher mortality for women during both war and postwar periods [Citation1–4], and add to women’s exclusion from decision-making on issues concerning peace and conflict [Citation5]. Reproductive insecurities also contribute to women’s poverty [Citation6], with potential harmful effects for sustainable development in postwar and conflict-affected contexts. This suggests that improving reproductive health has possible long-term societal benefits, by both improving women’s position and health, and by reducing poverty and inequality in decision-making [Citation7]. Recognising this, the UN Sustainable Development Goals situate maternal health as a global priority, and recent resolutions in the Women, Peace and Security agenda stresses sexual and reproductive health assistance for survivors of sexual violence.

However, we still do not know enough about how and why women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) are affected by wars and armed conflicts.

Existing research in global health often emphasise health infrastructure as the key factor affecting women’s and girls’ health in war and postwar settings. Studies show that organised violence increases the risk of maternal deaths because of the breakdown or reduction of health infrastructure, constraining women’s and girls’ access to reproductive and maternal health services [Citation8]; because of structural and secondary factors such as malnutrition, poverty and a lack of clean water [Citation9]; and sexual and gender-based violence, and other human rights violations [Citation10,Citation11]. We know now that restricted access to family planning and health care initiatives lead to an increase in unwanted pregnancies and unsafe abortions [Citation8,Citation12], with research suggesting that interventions focused on improving access to maternal health can offset the negative effects of war on women’s and girl’s wellbeing [Citation13] through, for example, increasing the availability of maternal and reproductive health services [Citation14], clean water and nutrition [Citation11] and/or peacekeeping operations providing security [Citation13]. In other words, this body of research has in important ways helped increase recognition of the impact of war on women’s reproductive health and rights by demonstrating 1) that wars impede access to maternal health care; and 2) that this can be offset by targeted interventions focused on increasing access to and availability of health care; contraceptives; and essential nutrients. While these data have extended our understanding of women’s reproductive health in war in critical ways, they remain yoked to explanations privileging infrastructure and systematic factors impacting SRHR in war and postwar situations. As such, they do not provide a complete picture of how and why SRHR are impacted by war.

This is because women and girl’s bodily integrity and reproductive security is a phenomenon both deeply politicised as well as securitised. We suggest that applying feminist perspectives on war to global health research concerning SRHR in wars can help draw our attention to how women’s bodies are at the centre of policies and violent struggles that have variously been described as a form population control [Citation15]; genocide [Citation16]; ethnic cleansing [Citation17]; and as a weapon of war [Citation18]. Furthermore, studies show that rebel groups monitor reproductive policies and relations between recruits, expecting recruits to retire upon pregnancy or marriage [Citation19,Citation20], impose abortions or contraceptive use on women [Citation21] and enforce marriages between soldiers or between soldiers and local women [Citation22]. Recent reports from Nigeria suggest that Boko Haram forcibly married and raped women and girls; in turn, the state military enforced abortions on women released from the non-state armed group [Citation23]. Controlling and adapting practices and policies around conjugal relations and reproduction to fit military objectives appears to be a crucial aspect of war, suggesting that SRHR is not incidental to war but integral to military tactics and strategies, shaping women’s experiences of both war and postwar periods.

The example of Myanmar

To illustrate the complex relationship between war and women’s sexual and reproductive health, we can use the case of Myanmar. Myanmar has a long history of ethno-nationalistic wars, wherein women’s bodies and reproduction have been policed, monitored and utilised as a strategy of warfare and population control by both state and non-state militaries [Citation24]. Research from Myanmar suggests that the history of ethnic armed conflict, as well as the military organisations themselves, shape reproductive policies, and in particular contraceptive uptake, in multiple ways. This research illustrates how ethnic non-state military actors interrupt family planning initiatives [Citation25], discouraging contraceptive use [Citation26], asking women to ‘reproduce for the revolution’ [Citation20], in order to counter what is widely perceived as attempts by the state to eradicate and ‘dilute’ ethnic minority communities. Birth control is often understood as a form of population control aimed at ethnic minority communities, with recent legislation restricting the number of births minority women can have and who they can marry [Citation27]. Decades of war, followed by brutal counterinsurgency campaigns aimed at ethnic minority communities and the re-routing of funding from healthcare to military needs, seems to have severely hampered health infrastructure in general and women’s access to reproductive health services in particular. Indeed, recent data show that women living in ethnic minority regions are both least likely to use modern contraceptives [Citation28] and have higher estimates of maternal mortality as compared to those living in non-ethnic areas [Citation29]. This is concerning, as Myanmar has exceptionally high levels of maternal mortality and morbidity overall, with 10% of maternal deaths being attributed to unsafe abortions [Citation30]. Yet reports also show that Myanmar scores relatively high on the Sustainable Development Goals family planning indicators [Citation31] and that awareness among women for family planning is widespread [Citation32]. What can then explain the low uptake [Citation28] and high maternal mortality in ethnic minority communities [Citation29]?

Seeing the full picture

The question of how and why women’s sexual and reproductive health matter in wars thus remain theoretically and empirically underexplored, highlighting the need to pay closer attention to this relationship. Moreover, previous studies have subsumed very different types of wars under one heading. While some exceptions to this exist [see [Citation33]], a large proportion of research in global health approach conflict as one phenomenon rather than as a complex and varied political phenomenon with complex and varied gendered effects. For example, studies on maternal health care use in the Democratic Republic of Congo [Citation14,Citation34], Cameroon, Mali, and Nigeria; and Africa [Citation35,Citation36] as well as globally [Citation37,Citation38] take the primary definition of war from the UCDP dataset as given. However, different types of wars have different effects, and it is important to carefully identify and analyse these effects across and within conflicts. For instance, regular wars will use different methods, tactics and strategies as compared to irregular or hybrid wars [Citation39]. Ethnic conflict, revolutionary uprisings, genocide, terrorist attacks and civil wars are all strategized, fought and experienced differently on the ground. Thus, rather than lumping arguably very different wars together as one, it is important to carefully unpack, examine and trace disparities in reproductive health access and uptake within different types of conflicts. Indeed, feminist research on sexual violence against women in war demonstrates how sexual and other forms of gender-based violence ‘take various forms and exhibit different patterns across contexts’ [Citation40], showing extensive regional variation, both across and within wars [Citation41–43]. Moreover, armed groups, even those fighting in the same region, may exhibit vastly different policies and practices regarding women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights. For example, in Myanmar, while the Restoration Council of Shan State has prevented public health workers from carrying out family planning initiatives [Citation25], others, like the Kachin Independence Organisation have allowed for this work within their communities (see kachinwomen.com).

Existing research thus shows that first, SRHR are not incidental to but an integral part of military strategies and the conduct of wars, and second, affect women’s vulnerability and mortality in war beyond the immediacy of the battlefield. Third, analysis of SRHR in war needs to be undertaken at the micro rather than at the macro level to allow for granular analysis of why and where these rights are recognised and why and where they ignored or outright abused. While insights and methods from public health can help us to identify and examine the relationship between conflicts and their effects on women, feminist perspectives on wars could help us explore the varied ways in which these dynamics are experienced, understood and received on the ground. Moreover, these insights are essential to guide future interventions to strengthen reproductive health in conflict setting, as evidence of effective interventions today are scarce [Citation4].

While the most common and, in the words of Jürg Utzinger and Mitchell Weiss ‘obvious way’ to consider public health implications of war is in terms of civilian and military casualties and injuries [Citation44], a focus on direct mortality risks obfuscating the more long-term and gendered effects of armed conflicts which affects the bodies of women and girls in uneven ways. In a new global landscape with emerging polarisation, conflicts and war, the collection of further data and theorising on why this is the case appear urgent. Here, listening to and learning from women and girls living in war and postwar settings is crucial for making visible the interlocking hierarchies of gendered power producing and obscuring reproductive harms long after the official end of conflict.

We suggest that studies in global health could benefit from merging insights from public health and feminist war studies, enabling not only explanations on how war affect women and girls’ sexual and reproductive health, but also allowing us to respond to the fundamental question: why? Why are women and girl’s sexual and reproductive rights violated and manipulated in armed conflict, and how can we prevent or resolve war’s effects on the bodily integrity and wellbeing on women and girls? By acknowledging the complexity of wars and armed conflicts, and the different gendered effects it has on women’s sexual and reproductive health, we can get closer to seeing the full picture and understand the ‘why’ - which is a first and essential step for action to protect women’s SRHR.

Author contributions

The authors equally contributed to the paper.

Paper context

Global health research on sexual and reproductive health and rights in wars and armed conflicts tend to emphasise disruptions of infrastructure with negative effects on access to services as the main challenge. Adding feminist perspectives on war to global health research explanations of how war affects women’s and girls’ sexual and reproductive health would acknowledge the complexity of wars and armed conflicts, and the different gendered effects it has on women’s sexual and reproductive health.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by funding from the Swedish Research Council [grant no. 2020-01922].

References

  • Li Q, Wen M. The immediate and lingering effects of armed conflict on adult mortality: a time-series cross-national analysis the immediate and lingering effects of armed conflict on adult mortality: a time-series cross-national analysis*. J Peace Res. 2005;42:471–4.
  • Ormhaug C, Hernes H. Armed conflict deaths disaggregated by gender. Prio Pap. 2009;23:1–26.
  • Svallfors S. Bodies and battlefields: sexual and reproductive health and rights in the Colombian armed conflict. Stockholm: Stockholm Univeristy; 2021.
  • Singh NS, Aryasinghe S, Smith J, Khosla R, Say L, Blanchet K. A long way to go: a systematic review to assess the utilisation of sexual and reproductive health services during humanitarian crises. BMJ Glob Health. 2018;3:e000682.
  • Davies SE, Harman S. Securing reproductive health: a matter of international peace and security. Int Stud Q. 2020;64:277–284.
  • Allen RH. The role of family planning in poverty reduction. Obstet Gynecol. 2007;110:999–1002.
  • Canning D, Schultz TP. The economic consequences of reproductive health and family planning. Lancet. 2012;380:165–171.
  • Chi PC, Bulage P, Urdal H, Sundby J. Perceptions of the effects of armed conflict on maternal and reproductive health services and outcomes in Burundi and Northern Uganda: a qualitative study. Int Health Hum Rights. 2015;15:1–15.
  • Fatusić Z, Kurjak A, Grgić G, Tulumovic A. The influence of the war on perinatal and maternal mortality in Bosnia and Herzegovina. J Matern-Fetal Neonatal Med off J Eur Assoc Perinat Med Fed Asia Ocean Perinat Soc Int Soc Perinat Obstet. 2005;18:259–263.
  • Mullany LC, Beyrer C, Lee TJ, Lee C, Yone L, Paw P, et al. Access to essential maternal health interventions and human rights violations among vulnerable communities in eastern Burma. PLoS Med. 2008;5:1689–1698.
  • The Burma Medical Association National Health and Education, The Back Pack Health Worker Team. Diagnosis critical: health and human rights in eastern Burma. 2010. p. 1–54.
  • Urdal H, Che CP. War and gender inequalities in health: the impact of armed conflict on fertility and maternal mortality. Int Interact. 2013;39:489–510.
  • Gizelis TI, Cao X. A security dividend: peacekeeping and maternal health outcomes and access. J Peace Res. 2021;58:263–278.
  • Zhang T, Qi X, He Q, Hee J, Takesuem R, Yan Y, et al. The effects of conflicts and self-reported insecurity on maternal healthcare utilisation and children health outcomes in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Healthcare. Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; 2021. p. 842.
  • Korac M. Ethnic nationalism, wars and the patterns of social, political and sexual violence against women: the case of post Yugoslav countries. Identities Glob Stud Cult Power. 1998;5:153–181.
  • Sharlach L. Rape as genocide: Bangladesh, the former Yugoslavia, and Rwanda. New Polit Sci. 2000;22:89–102.
  • Salzman TA. Rape camps as a means of ethnic cleansing: religious, cultural, and ethical responses to rape victims in the former Yugoslavia. Hum Rights Q. 1998;20:348–378.
  • Kirby P. How is rape a weapon of war? Feminist international relations, modes of critical explanation and the study of wartime sexual violence. Eur J Int Relat. 2012;19:797–821.
  • Viterna J. Women in war. Women war micro-process. Mobilization El Salv. New York: Oxford University Press; 2013.
  • Hedström J. Reproducing revolution: a feminist political economy analysis of the conflict in Kachinland. Melbourne: Monash University; 2018.
  • Sanín FG, Carranza Franco F. Organizing women for combat: the experience of the FARC in the Colombian war. J Agrar Change. 2017;17:770–778.
  • Marks Z. Gender dynamics in rebel groups. Palgrave Int Handb Gend Mil. 2017;437–454.
  • Carsten P, Levinson R, Lewis D, et al. Nigeria military ran secret mass abortion program in war on Boko Haram. Reuters.com [Internet]. Available from: https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/nigeria-military-abortions/
  • Hedström J. Militarized social reproduction: women’s labour and parastate armed conflict. Crit Mil Stud. 2020;8:1–19.
  • Quadrini M. ‘They want to grow their armies’: shan armed groups obstruct family planning efforts. Front Myanmar. 2019 May; p. 1–6.
  • Tin Htet Paing. Families unplanned in Kachin IDP camps. Irrawaddy [Internet]. 2017; Available from: https://reliefweb.int/report/myanmar/families-unplanned-kachin-idp-camps
  • Ikeya C. Transcultural intimacies in British Burma and the straits setttlements: a history of belonging, difference, and empire. In: Laffan M, editor. Belong Bay Bengal relig rites colon migr natl rights. London: Bloomsbury Academic; 2017. p. 117–137.
  • Ko Ko M, Hla Win H, MacQuarrie KLD. Geographical disparities and determinants of anaemia among women of reproductive age in Myanmar: analysis of the 2015-2016 Myanmar demographic and health survey. WHO South-East Asia J Public Health. 2018;7:107–113.
  • Loyer AB, Ali M, Loyer D. New politics, an opportunity for maternal health advancement in eastern Myanmar: an integrative review. J Health Pop Nutr. 2014;32:471–485.
  • Ministry of Labour Immigration and Population. The 2014 Myanmar population and housing census: thematic report on maternal mortality. Nay Pyi Taw: The Republic of the Union of Myanmar; 2016. p. 1–30.
  • UNFPA. Sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights country profile: Myanmar [Internet]. UNFPA; 2020. Available from: https://www.unfpa.org/resources/sexual-and-reproductive-health-and-reproductive-rights-country-profile
  • Salisbury P. Family planning knowledge, attitudes and practices in refugee and migrant pregnant and post-partum women on the Thailand-Myanmar border – a mixed methods study. Reprod Health. 2016;13. DOI:10.1186/s12978-016-0212-2
  • Druetz T, Browne L, Bicaba F, Mitchell M, Bicaba A. Effects of terrorist attacks on access to maternal healthcare services: a national longitudinal study in Burkina Faso. BMJ Glob Health. 2020;5:e002879.
  • Ramadan M, Tappis H, Brieger W. Primary healthcare quality in conflict and fragility: a subnational analysis of disparities using population health surveys. Confl Health. 2022;16. DOI:10.1186/s13031-022-00466-w
  • O’hare BAM, Southall DP. First do no harm: the impact of recent armed conflict on maternal and child health in Sub-Saharan Africa. J R Soc Med. 2007;100:564–570.
  • Kotsadam A, Østby G. Armed conflict and maternal mortality: a micro-level analysis of sub-Saharan Africa, 1989–2013. Soc Sci Med. 2019;239.
  • Jawad M, Hone T, Vamos EP, Roderick P, Sullivan R, Millett C. Estimating indirect mortality impacts of armed conflict in civilian populations: panel regression analyses of 193 countries, 1990–2017. BMC Med. 2020;18:1–11.
  • Jawad M, Hone T, Vamos EP, Cetorelli V, Millett C. Implications of armed conflict for maternal and child health: a regression analysis of data from 181 countries for 2000–2019. PLoS Med. 2021;18:e1003810.
  • Hoffman F. Hybrid warfare revisited. Glob Ecco. 2015;5:34–39.
  • Schulz P, Kreft K Accountability for conflict-related sexual violence introduction: recent developments in redressing conflict-related sexu-al violence. 2022;1–25.
  • Asal V, Nagel RU. Control over bodies and territories: insurgent territorial control and sexual violence. Secur Stud. 2021;30:136–158.
  • Nagel RU, Doctor AC. Conflict-related sexual violence and rebel group fragmentation. J Confl Resolut. 2020;64:1226–1253.
  • Nordås R, Nagel RU. Continued failure to end wartime sexual violence. 2018. DOI:10.1080/13623699.2018.1541625
  • Utzinger J, Mg W. Editorial: armed conflict, war and public health. Trop Med Int Health. 2007;12:903–906.