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Why Hillary Clinton should be careful using "rape" and "mark of shame" in the same sentence

UN urges greater support for empowering women on International Women’s Day: http://bit.ly/aE5Jll #women
from UN
Security Council reviews Iran sanctions http://bit.ly/c8bJsO
from AmbassadorRice
Next Monday is International Women's Day. What are you doing to celebrate? @DipNote will highlight events on State.gov and the Dipnote blog.
from DipNote


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R Sloan:
9 Mar 12:49pm
Heart of Flesh, A Feminist Spirituality for Women and Men by Joan D.
Chittister
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Kate Grace:
9 Mar 12:38pm
I don't know if my post went thru so here it is again: READ ALL BOOKS BY MARY
DALY. Mary passed aw
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Kate Grace:
9 Mar 12:32pm
Every woman and feminist could benefit from reading all of the works of Mary
Daly. She has been the
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Visitor:
9 Mar 12:19pm
It is great, Reading enhances your vision and empowers your actions.
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Visitor:
9 Mar 11:47am
Women Writing Resistance: Women Essayists from Latin America and the
Caribbean. Amazing book about
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Visitor:
9 Mar 10:08am
Push, by Sapphire
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Visitor:
7 Mar 10:37am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
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Visitor:
7 Mar 10:36am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
read more
Visitor:
7 Mar 10:35am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
read more
Visitor:
3 Mar 7:36pm
It can't be done. It's not about facts; it's about political opportunism.
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Chris de Ocejo:
26 Feb 11:29am
Yes, but the IPCC report is one of many, hundreds of reports which show the
warming trend. It's a bi
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Matthew Cordell:
26 Feb 8:28am
The false claims do not "rely" on the core science, nor are they "purported
to." Publishing a misju
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Chris de Ocejo:
23 Feb 9:32am
Stoning to death (rajm) is not a punishment prescribed by the Qur'an. Several
ahadith exist which su
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Visitor:
18 Feb 7:00pm
You know, I agree with your sense of absolute outrage. But the real reason
that women have these thi
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Visitor:
18 Feb 6:48pm
I am shocked. Not that Muslim women were caned. That was a LIGHT punishment
under Shari-a. The real
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Visitor:
18 Feb 6:37pm
No. We piloted the Nuremburg Courts, and we proved than that this concept can
work. We don't have to
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Visitor:
18 Feb 5:35pm
I wonder why the President of Chad wants the MINURCAT to leave when they are
protecting people???
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Visitor:
11 Feb 1:49pm
The ICC is a good start, but could be strengthened significantly. The fact
that the United States ha
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Mark Leon Goldberg - January 12, 2010 - 5:52 pm








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John Boonstra - August 11, 2009 - 2:16 pm
Like Alanna, I too am glad to see Secretary of State Clinton focusing on the pandemic of rape in eastern DR Congo. I'm also glad, to judge from the flurry of media reports coming out of Goma and Kinshasa, that her visit and her attention are having some effect. And naturally, I'm glad that she's calling for an end to impunity -- for real "arrests and prosecutions and punishment" -- for perpetrators of this crime (easier said than done, unfortunately, given its ubiquity among all sides of the conflict).
But what also struck me from Clinton's comments was this snippet highlighted by FP's Madam Secretary blog:
She's right, of course, and her purpose is to upend the lamentable status quo, in which rape is rampant and unchallenged. And maybe there's a sort of power in reversing the meaning of the phrase "mark of shame," using it to signify the failure to combat rape, rather than rape itself, as so often occurs in places like Congo where what should be a war crime is seen as a stigma. But "mark of shame," I think, falls too close to this line; in a culture in which the entrenched response to rape remains shame and ostracization -- or even laughter and mockery -- it's difficult to use that emotion to galvanize a vigorous and difficult campaign to change not just a country's punitive structures, but a society's very mores.