In an increasingly global and systematically fragmented world, war continues to generate victims. Thus, men, women, and others of different gender identities have suffered the horrors emanating from violent conflicts among human beings. Their forms of suffering vary, however, because women and people of other gender identities experience and suffer from these conflicts differently. The goal of this work is to disseminate a series of studies and reflections on war from a gender perspective. It presents the work of different academic writers using the approaches and techniques of their own respective disciplines to take on classical questions as well as reformulate and delve deeper into some existing analyses.