
Focusing on the flight of women and girls from Venezuela, this book examines the gendered nature of forced displacement and the ways in which the failures of protection regimes to be sensitive to displacement's gendered character affect women and girls, and their sexual and reproductive health.
Highlighting how categorical legal distinctions between 'refugees' and 'migrants' fail to capture the dynamics of forced migration in Latin America, it investigates how the operation of this categorical divide generates responsibility and protection gaps in relation to female forced migrants which act as determinants of sexual and reproductive health. Drawing on the voices of displaced women, it argues that a robust political ethics of protection of the forcibly displaced must encompass all necessary fleers and be responsive to the gendered character of forced displacement and particularly to effective access to sexual and reproductive health rights.
"A conceptually rich and practically grounded analysis that puts the human rights of women and girls at the forefront of reform of the international system of refugee protection." Alex Aleinikoff, The New School for Social Research
"This is a powerful and important book, revealing the complex gendering of the migration experience and the categories that serve to exclude women and others from protection and support." Heaven Crawley, United Nations University