A collection of responses to the Human Security Report 2012 collated by Laura J. Shepherd (Tweet @drljshepherd)

Wartime Sexual Violence: Misconceptions, Implications, and Ways Forward

By Dara Kay Cohen, Amelia Hoover Green and Elisabeth Jean Wood published by the United States Institute of Peace (USIP)

The Dangerous Arguments in the 2012 Human Security Report: Moving the Debate Away from the Academics and the Wonks

By Phoebe Randel for the World Peace Foundation

The Big Kill

By John Arquilla for Foreign Policy

Sexual Violence on the Decline?

By Ragnhild Nordas, Senior Researcher, PRIO, for the PRIO Gender, Peace and Security Update Issue 4 (2012) 

Rape in Congo is not a myth

By Iain Guest for The Guardian (UK)

Global Trends in Conflict-Related Sexual Violence. A Response to Green, Cohen, and Wood

By Andrew Mack of the Human Security Report Project for the Duck of Minerva

Statistics about global violence manipulate politics

By Carlos Miranda for The Triangle

What’s Wrong with the Human Security Report and the “Global Decline Claim”

Guest post by Amelia Hoover Green (Drexel University), Dara Kay Cohen (Harvard Kennedy School) and Elisabeth Jean Wood (Yale University) for the Duck of Minerva

‘Irresponsible report’ making headlines

By Madeleine for Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom

The Cursory Pedant: War Rape, the Human Security Report and the Calculation of Violence

By Pablo K for the Disorder of Things

Plain and Simple: A Huge Disservice

By 4WomenWorldwide

Realities of rape in war

From the blog ‘Texas in Africa’

Human Security Report 2012: Challenging our thinking on wartime sexual violence

By Kerry Crawford (guest post)

Oxfam responds to the Human Security Report 2012

Posted by Ed Cairns, Senior Policy Adviser, Research

Guest Post: A Rejoinder to Megan MacKenzie

By Andrew Mack of the Human Security Report Project