RT Book, Section T1 Social Control, Punishment, and Gender: Silenced Memories of Peruvian Women in Wartime A1 Romero Delgado, Marta A2 Pillai, Shreerekha AB This chapter examines prison experiences of women who joined two Peruvian left-wing armed groups, the Peruvian Communist Party-Shining Path and the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement. Female participation in this recent stage of political violence in Peru (1980-2000) was widespread, which led to the construction of the social representations of women belonging to these groups as “cruel, perverse and unnatural”. This stereotype and prejudice contribute to punished women social, symbolic and judicially more severe than men, even if they were accused of lesser charges. Many of the punishments that these women suffered, were and still are, based on gender. Furthermore, this gendered character of punishment is clearly interwoven with another kind of violence and discrimination, racism. PB University of Illinois Press SN 978-0-252-08732-5 SN 978-0-252-05455-6 SN 978-0-252-04518-9 YR 2023 FD 2023-08-15 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/133462 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/133462 LA eng NO Romero-Delgado, Marta, 'Social Control, Punishment, and Gender: Silenced Memories of Peruvian Women in Wartime', in Shreerekha Pillai (ed.), Carceral Liberalism: Feminist Voices against State Violence (Champaign, IL, 2023; online edn, Illinois Scholarship Online, 23 May 2024), https://doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252045189.003.0011, accessed 27 Feb. 2026. DS Docta Complutense RD 17 mar 2026