I am honored to have been invited to write this preface to a most welcome
volume on women’s rights in transitional contexts. The volume includes
case studies from across a wide range of transitional sites and examines
pressing issues of sexual and gender based, violence, reproductive rights,
and women’s participation across case studies in Africa, Asia, Europe, and
Latin America. The editors are to be congratulated for bringing together
these contributions which are at once wide-ranging and coherent in
addressing pressing and sometimes underexplored themes.
The colonial and post-colonial contexts of these case studies receive
attention—this is especially important as this addresses the long-term
effect of historic inequality and injustice. The regularity with which the
contributors refer to the colonial context reminds us that colonialism has
been a major shaper of the states of the globe and often of their problems
and challenges.
The authors also address the pressing issue of the role of religion in
legal systems and especially in the context of transitions and challenges to
women’s rights. While human rights scholars have devoted some attention
to the role of religion (at least in the guise of the universalism and cultural
relativism debates), transitional justice scholars have not devoted so much
attention. The authors consider the role of religion in contributing to
repressive practices, but also highlight the scope to reinterpret religious
practices and texts.