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Iraq, Sanctions and Security: A Critique
Resource type
            
        Author/contributor
                    - Bahdi, Reem (Author)
Title
            Iraq, Sanctions and Security: A Critique
        Abstract
            Women’s pain and death blurs the distinction between war and peace. Women are disproportionately starved, attacked physically, emotionally and psychologically, and killed during both war and peace. This paper focuses on the sanctions imposed against Iraq by the United Nations Security Council (“Se- curity Council”) in response to Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990 and the on-going purported threat posed to international peace and security by the Iraqi regime. Intended as a humane alternative to war, the sanctions have nonetheless lead to such high levels of death and suffering, particularly among women and children, that commentators have labeled them “genocide,” a “medieval military siege,” and “a humanitarian disaster comparable to the worst catastrophes of the past decades.”
        Genre
            SSRN Scholarly Paper
        Archive ID
            1718454
        Place
            Rochester, NY
        Date
            2002
        Accessed
            9/4/23, 1:30 AM
        Short Title
            Iraq, Sanctions and Security
        Language
            en
        Library Catalog
            Social Science Research Network
        Citation
            Bahdi, R. (2002). Iraq, Sanctions and Security: A Critique (SSRN Scholarly Paper 1718454). https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=1718454
                Author / Editor
            
            
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