Shadows into Light: A Generation of Former Child Soldiers Comes of Age

A twenty-plus-year study of former child soldiers offers far-reaching insight into mental health and resilience after extreme trauma.

During the civil war that ravaged Sierra Leone from 1991 to 2002, an estimated 20,000 children were forced to join the fighting. As villages were raided and youths rounded up, it was not uncommon for a child to be ordered to kill a friend, relative, or neighbor under threat of being killed themselves. The goal was to make it impossible for the captives to return home and be accepted back into their communities.

But when the conflict ended, many of the children did find their way home. Could they reintegrate after such extreme trauma? Theresa Betancourt and her collaborators in Sierra Leone launched a study of more than 500 boys and girls who had been pulled into the war, tracking them for over two decades. The results were surprising: despite everything they had suffered, this was not a lost generation. In fact, the most dominant trend over time was one of healing and increasing acceptance. The lives of the former child soldiers were shaped not just by their personal ordeals but also, crucially, by the responses of their families, peers, and broader communities. Filled with vivid personal stories, Shadows into Light describes heartbreak and despair but also remarkable triumphs made possible by layers of social support and encouragement.

Betancourt’s study provides unparalleled insight into the long-term psychological and developmental effects of family separation, war, and exposure to violence. The lessons go far beyond Sierra Leone’s tragedy, suggesting that we should, in general, think of children’s risk and resilience more as products of the post-trauma environment than as individual traits.

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Shadows into Light: A Generation of Former Child Soldiers Comes of Age

A twenty-plus-year study of former child soldiers offers far-reaching insight into mental health and resilience after extreme trauma.

During the civil war that ravaged Sierra Leone from 1991 to 2002, an estimated 20,000 children were forced to join the fighting. As villages were raided and youths rounded up, it was not uncommon for a child to be ordered to kill a friend, relative, or neighbor under threat of being killed themselves. The goal was to make it impossible for the captives to return home and be accepted back into their communities.

But when the conflict ended, many of the children did find their way home. Could they reintegrate after such extreme trauma? Theresa Betancourt and her collaborators in Sierra Leone launched a study of more than 500 boys and girls who had been pulled into the war, tracking them for over two decades. The results were surprising: despite everything they had suffered, this was not a lost generation. In fact, the most dominant trend over time was one of healing and increasing acceptance. The lives of the former child soldiers were shaped not just by their personal ordeals but also, crucially, by the responses of their families, peers, and broader communities. Filled with vivid personal stories, Shadows into Light describes heartbreak and despair but also remarkable triumphs made possible by layers of social support and encouragement.

Betancourt’s study provides unparalleled insight into the long-term psychological and developmental effects of family separation, war, and exposure to violence. The lessons go far beyond Sierra Leone’s tragedy, suggesting that we should, in general, think of children’s risk and resilience more as products of the post-trauma environment than as individual traits.

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Shadows into Light: A Generation of Former Child Soldiers Comes of Age

Shadows into Light: A Generation of Former Child Soldiers Comes of Age

Shadows into Light: A Generation of Former Child Soldiers Comes of Age

Shadows into Light: A Generation of Former Child Soldiers Comes of Age

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Overview

A twenty-plus-year study of former child soldiers offers far-reaching insight into mental health and resilience after extreme trauma.

During the civil war that ravaged Sierra Leone from 1991 to 2002, an estimated 20,000 children were forced to join the fighting. As villages were raided and youths rounded up, it was not uncommon for a child to be ordered to kill a friend, relative, or neighbor under threat of being killed themselves. The goal was to make it impossible for the captives to return home and be accepted back into their communities.

But when the conflict ended, many of the children did find their way home. Could they reintegrate after such extreme trauma? Theresa Betancourt and her collaborators in Sierra Leone launched a study of more than 500 boys and girls who had been pulled into the war, tracking them for over two decades. The results were surprising: despite everything they had suffered, this was not a lost generation. In fact, the most dominant trend over time was one of healing and increasing acceptance. The lives of the former child soldiers were shaped not just by their personal ordeals but also, crucially, by the responses of their families, peers, and broader communities. Filled with vivid personal stories, Shadows into Light describes heartbreak and despair but also remarkable triumphs made possible by layers of social support and encouragement.

Betancourt’s study provides unparalleled insight into the long-term psychological and developmental effects of family separation, war, and exposure to violence. The lessons go far beyond Sierra Leone’s tragedy, suggesting that we should, in general, think of children’s risk and resilience more as products of the post-trauma environment than as individual traits.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674299689
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 01/21/2025
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Theresa S. Betancourt is the inaugural Salem Professor in Global Practice at the Boston College School of Social Work and Director of the Research Program on Children and Adversity. She has been an advisor for UNICEF, the International Rescue Committee, Amnesty International, the US Institute of Peace, and the World Health Organization, and served as an expert of the International Criminal Court.

Table of Contents

Cover Title Page Copyright Dedication Contents Foreword by Moses Zombo List of Abbreviations Part I. War’s Impact 1. War’s Children 2. The Global Face of Conflict 3. Children, War, and Trauma 4. Jellybeans in Darkness 5. Swit Salone 6. The Embodiment of War 7. Without Family 8. Touchstones Part II. Journeys Home 9. Finding the Way Home 10. Post-traumatic Growth 11. Boots on Muddy Ground 12. A Mother’s Courage 13. The Helpers 14. The Sting of Rejection 15. Social Ties Part III. Reintegration 16. The Puzzle of Girls’ Resilience 17. Reverberations of Violence against Girls and Women 18. Good Deeds Always Come Back by Moses Zombo 19. Meaning Making and Transformation 20. Adversity upon Adversity 21. Write on the World 22. The Education Gap Part IV. Community and Healing 23. Narrative Healing 24. Adult Lives 25. Coming of Age in the Aftermath of War 26. Trauma and Resilience across Generations Part V. Rebuilding the Future 27. The Next Generation 28. Ready to Learn, Ready to Work 29. Reaching the Hard to Reach Epilogue Notes Acknowledgments Index
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