Women and women’s rights are aspects in day-to-day life and even more so in global politics which are becoming even more important and relevant worldwide and the world becomes more globalized. with the slow demise of the Islamic State that occurred over recent years, the group have lost the territories they once so savagely took over and ruled, leaving ISIS members incarcerated in jails and held up in camps in Syria and Iraq. Therefore, this topic of the women of ISIS, and also by default their children, who are held up in the camps is one that is highly relevant and even more so on the European agenda lately, as many of the women and children are citizens of EU countries and wish to be repatriated back home. The women and children of the Caliphate are an important topic on the agenda of the European Union and its member states, whom the women are citizens of. This is an important topic as they pose the difficult dilemma of whether they are a security threat to their home countries or not. The issue of the concept of security alongside issues surrounding the concept of human rights are both equally as important for states. Thus, the specific case regarding the repatriation of the women of ISIS has brought up dividing thoughts and opinions on how to tackle the situation. The thesis will do a critical discourse analysis on the approach taken by Denmark in relation to the repatriation of the women of ISIS. Hereafter through a discussion of how this approach can. Be understood and deconstructed through a poststructuralist framework. Additionally, the thesis wishes to suggest an alternative possible approach to repatriation which would benefit everyone involved which encompasses adopting a solution through a constructivist lens.