Children and Violence offers a rigorous intellectual intervention into the prevailing humanitarian discourses that often infantilise children in conflict zones. At its core, the book deconstructs the ‘passive victim’ archetype that dominates international legal frameworks, proposing instead a nuanced ‘child-victim-agent’ triad (p. 191). By centring the lived experiences of children, the contributors challenge us to reconsider child abuse not merely as a collateral effect of war but as a complex manifestation of structural and political forces where young actors exercise ‘social navigation’ (p. 6) even within highly constrained environments. The book's strength lies in its refusal to adhere to traditional boundaries. It bridges the Global North and South by connecting diverse ‘fights’—from the recruitment of child soldiers in the DRC(p. 46) to the legal debates surrounding the non-punishment of child victims(p. 125) and the gendered subjugation of bacha posh in Afghanistan(p. 164). By integrating law, anthropology and media studies, the contributors adopt a decolonised lens that frames violence as a systemic issue rooted in racialised hierarchies. Rather than a dry survey of trauma, these chapters collectively interrogate how social and literary representations either empower or marginalise children's political subjecthood. While the dense academic and legal jargon may pose a challenge for frontline practitioners seeking immediate policy prescriptions, this theoretical depth is precisely what lends the work its authority. By grounding the discourse in rigorous analysis, Children and Violence provides a robust foundation for a rights-based approach that prioritises the lived experiences of youth over traditional, patronising protectionist models. Children and Violence serves as an essential resource for scholars and advocates alike, effectively shifting the conversation towards a framework that respects the dignity and agency of children. From my perspective, the most striking takeaway is how it proves that combating child abuse requires more than just external intervention; it demands a fundamental acknowledgement of children's resilience and their right to be heard as active political subjects in their own recovery and justice processes. This work was supported by the University of Shanghai for Science and Technology (USST)-Padre IT Excellence Engineers Joint Training Center (2025) under Grant (number X202510).
Ming Li (Thu,) studied this question.