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Philippine Prison Marriages

The Politics of Kinship and Women's Composite Agency

Sif Lehman Jensen

Abstract

This article, from the perspective of how agency is nested in this choice, explores why women marry imprisoned insurgents from the southern Philippines. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Maharlika Village, a major Muslim community in Manila, the article discusses how women negotiate gender relations, family, and insurgency politics against the backdrop of political conflict and their precarious everyday lives. The analysis asks how prison marriages feed into the women's everyday maneuvering of the metropole, and how marrying a political prisoner is embedded in moral and gendered obligations arising from the entangled relationship between kinship and insurgency politics. Theoretically, the article argues that prison marriages are part of the women's composite agency, which captures how they aim at fulfilling contradictory desires, notions of morality and gendered obligations, which enables them to momentarily attain their own aspirations.

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Germany and the United States

Whither “Partners in Leadership”?

Matthew Rhodes

Russia’s hybrid-warfare seizure of Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula in early 2014, followed by instigated separatist conflict in the Donbas region. Despite preceding gaps in transatlantic positions, coordination and division-of-labor between the United

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Frauke Mennes, John P. Hayes, David Kloos, Martha Lagace, Morten Koch Andersen, Somdeep Sen, Matthew Porges, and Sa’ed Atshan

try to imagine a new future. The separatist conflict is part of a long history of violence that started with the colonial war against the Dutch. What makes Aceh different from other cases is that, in the wake of these successive struggles, the