One Day the Soldiers Came - Charles London [116]
Williams, Elizabeth McKee. “Childhood, Memory, and the American Revolution.” In Children and War. Ed. James Marten. New York: New York University Press, 2002.
NEWSPAPER/MAGAZINE ARTICLES
Amornviputpanich, Punnee. “Daddy Htoo: The Teen Twin Rebels Grow Up.” The Nation (Bangkok), May 26, 2004.
Brennan, Richard; Husarska, Anna. “Inside Congo, an Unspeakable Toll.” Washington Post, July 16, 2006.
Derluyn, Ilse, et al. “Post-Traumatic Stress in Former Ugandan Child Soldiers.” The Lancet 363, May 15, 2004.
DRC: From Protection to Insurgency: History of the Mayi-Mayi. IRIN News Service, 2006.
Harnden, Toby. “Child Soldiers Square Up to U.S. Tanks.” London Telegraph, August 23, 2004.
Peterson, Scott. “Child Soldiers for the Taliban? Unlikely.” Christian Science Monitor, December 6, 1999.
Plemming, Sue. “Children Bear Brunt of Lebanon-Israeli War.” Reuters, August 15, 2006.
Singer, Peter W. “Western Militaries Confront Child Soldiers Threat.” Jane’s Intelligence Review, January 1, 2005.
Subotic, Tanja. “Suicide Rate Doubles in Post-War Bosnia.” AFP, May 6, 2003.
West Africa: Children in Danger; Begging for Teachers. IRIN News Service, 2006.
REPORTS/PAPERS
Apple, Betsy; Veronika Martin. No Safe Place: Burma’s Army and the Rape of Ethnic Women. Refugees International, 2003.
Boyden, Jo. “Social Healing in War-Affected and Displaced Children.” University of Oxford Refugee Studies Centre. AsylumSupport.info, 2003.
Caouette, Therese M., and Mary E. Pack. Pushing Past the Definitions: Migration from Burma to Thailand. Open Society Institute, 2002.
Colombia’s War on Children. New York: The Watchlist on Children and Armed Conflict, 2004.
Democratic Republic of the Congo: Demobilization Programs Require Special Focus on Girls. Washington, D.C.: Refugees International, 2006.
Democratic Republic of the Congo: Reluctant Recruits: Children and Adults Forcibly Recruited for Military Service in North Kivu. New York: Human Rights Watch, 2000.
Edgerton, Anne. Child Soldiers in the Eastern Congo. Washington D.C: Refugees International, 2001.
Fitzgerald, Mary Anne. Throwing the Stick Forward: The Impact of War on Southern Sudanese Women. African Women for Peace Series: UNIFEM and UNICEF, 2002.
License to Rape: The Burmese Military Regime’s Use of Sexual Violence in the Ongoing War in Shan State. Chiangmai, Thailand: The Shan Human Rights Foundation & The Shan Women’s Action Network, 2002.
Making the Choice for a Better Life: Promoting the Protection and Capacity of Kosovo’s Youth. New York: Women’s Commission for Refugee Women and Children, 2001.
March 2000 Delegation to Sierra Leone Preliminary Findings and Recommendations. Physicians for Human Rights, 2000.
Myanmar: Atrocities in the Shan State. London: Amnesty International, 1998.
Pillsbury, Allison Anderson; Jane Lowicki. Against All Odds: Surviving the War on Adolescents. Promoting the Protection and Capacity of Ugandan and Sudanese Adolescents in Northern Uganda. New York: Women’s Commission for Refugee Women and Children, 2001.
Protection Through Participation. The Women’s Commission for Refugee Women and Children, 2003.
Shukla, Kavita. Ending the Waiting Game: Strategies for Responding to Internally Displaced People in Burma. Washington D.C.: Refugees International, 2006.
Total Denial Continues. Seattle: Earth Rights International, 2000. Under Orders: War Crimes in Kosovo. New York: Human Rights Watch, 2001.
Unsettling Moves: The Wa Forced Resettlement Program in Eastern Shan State. Chiangmai, Thailand: Lahu National Development Organisation, 2002.
Untapped Potential: Adolescents Affected by Armed Conflict: A Review of Programmes and Policies. Women’s Commission for Refugee Women and Children, 2000.
Youth Speak Out. New York: Women’s Commission for Refugee Women and Children, 2005.
FURTHER RESOURCES AND WHAT YOU CAN DO TO HELP
It is easy to feel despair when looking at the problems faced by children in wars, but there are many programs