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IRC Program Manager Aisling Swaine interviewed women across Timor-Leste for her new report on traditional justice and gender-based violence. Photo by Lisa Rogers, USAID-ET Small Grants Program
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New Report Shines a Light on Gender-Based Violence and Local Justice (October 6, 2003) The International Rescue Committee (IRC) has published the findings of its 6-month research project into how Timor-Leste' traditional justice systems handle cases of gender-based violence. IRC Program Manager Aisling Swaine conducted the research and wrote the 150-page report, which was presented at a public launch on September 4, 2003. The project was funded by an $89,100 grant from USAID. Swaine and her team traveled across Timor-Leste, talking to more than 100 people about local justice systems, and interviewing 60 women about their experiences as they sought protection from violence. The research report makes a series of detailed recommendations to the government, international donors, and non-governmental organizations. These organizations should:
At the report's launch IRC Country Director Belinda King said, "Cultural practices that are harmful to women, particularly those that rob them of a fair hearing and their legal entitlements, work against the empowerment of women and consequently the empowerment of half of Timor-Leste's society…I am confident that this study will be built on and influence work that will in turn continue to empower the women of Timor-Leste."
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