This interdisciplinary book explores how the policy goal of gender equality operates in arguably the most masculinist area of politics: peace and security. Gender equality was set on the international peace and security agenda with the adoption of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 in 2000 and the inception of the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) agenda. Celebrated internationally as an outcome of feminist advocacy efforts, the WPS agenda has over time become a site of contestation. Security institutions have questioned the placement of the gender equality objective within the peace and…mehr
This interdisciplinary book explores how the policy goal of gender equality operates in arguably the most masculinist area of politics: peace and security. Gender equality was set on the international peace and security agenda with the adoption of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 in 2000 and the inception of the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) agenda. Celebrated internationally as an outcome of feminist advocacy efforts, the WPS agenda has over time become a site of contestation. Security institutions have questioned the placement of the gender equality objective within the peace and security sector, whereas feminist advocates have expressed their concerns about the capacity of security institutions to support gender equality in meaningful ways. Drawing on insights of nearly seventy UN, government, international and local civil society experts, the book offers a systematic take on key gender equality debates within the WPS agenda in the case studies of UN Security Council, ASEAN and Pacific Islands Forum, and Governments of the Philippines and Australia. By looking back at the dilemmas of gender equality policymaking and their paradoxical effects in conflict and post-conflict situations, the book also looks forward to the third decade of the WPS agenda and the long-term impact of the agenda on the political struggle for gender equality in peace and security.
Barbara K. Trojanowska is a researcher, practitioner and women's rights advocate. Her research and policy interests lie at the intersection of women's rights instruments, global security and contentious politics. She published for international peer-reviewed journals and for the industry.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword Preface Acknowledgements Introduction: The Goal of Gender Equality in Peace and Security Dilemmas of Gender Equality Policymaking The Trajectory of Gender Equality Paradigms of Gender Equality in The Women, Peace and Security Agenda Global, Regional and National Perspectives Empirically-Driven Research Chapter 1: The United Nations Security Council Gender Equality in the UN's Peace and Security Discourse UNSCR 1325 and the Vision of Gender Equality The Emergence of Paradigms of Gender Equality The Security Paradigm The Development Paradigm The Human Rights Paradigm Post-2015 Resistance to Gender Equality Conclusions Chapter 2: The Association of Southeast Asian Nations and the Pacific Islands Forum The Role of Regional Organisations in Implementing UNSCR 1325 The Engagement of Asia and the Pacific with the Women, Peace and Security Agenda Association of Southeast Asian Nations Pacific Islands Forum Conclusions Chapter 3: Government of the Philippines The Women, Peace and Security Agenda and Armed Conflicts in the Philippines National Action Plans on Women, Peace and Security Government's Implementation of the National Action Plans Conclusions Chapter 4: Government of Australia The Women, Peace and Security Agenda and Australia's International Reputation National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security Government's Implementation of the National Action Plan Conclusions Conclusions: Transformative Politics of the Women, Peace and Security Agenda No Universal Goal of Gender Equality Implications of Paradigms of Gender Equality Gender Equality at the Juncture of Global, Regional and National Governance Connecting Policy Objectives with Lived Experience Bibliography Index
Foreword Preface Acknowledgements Introduction: The Goal of Gender Equality in Peace and Security Dilemmas of Gender Equality Policymaking The Trajectory of Gender Equality Paradigms of Gender Equality in The Women, Peace and Security Agenda Global, Regional and National Perspectives Empirically-Driven Research Chapter 1: The United Nations Security Council Gender Equality in the UN's Peace and Security Discourse UNSCR 1325 and the Vision of Gender Equality The Emergence of Paradigms of Gender Equality The Security Paradigm The Development Paradigm The Human Rights Paradigm Post-2015 Resistance to Gender Equality Conclusions Chapter 2: The Association of Southeast Asian Nations and the Pacific Islands Forum The Role of Regional Organisations in Implementing UNSCR 1325 The Engagement of Asia and the Pacific with the Women, Peace and Security Agenda Association of Southeast Asian Nations Pacific Islands Forum Conclusions Chapter 3: Government of the Philippines The Women, Peace and Security Agenda and Armed Conflicts in the Philippines National Action Plans on Women, Peace and Security Government's Implementation of the National Action Plans Conclusions Chapter 4: Government of Australia The Women, Peace and Security Agenda and Australia's International Reputation National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security Government's Implementation of the National Action Plan Conclusions Conclusions: Transformative Politics of the Women, Peace and Security Agenda No Universal Goal of Gender Equality Implications of Paradigms of Gender Equality Gender Equality at the Juncture of Global, Regional and National Governance Connecting Policy Objectives with Lived Experience Bibliography Index
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