Based on empirical research among women's antiwar organizations worldwide, the article derives a feminist oppositional standpoint on militarization and war. From this standpoint, patriarchal gender relations are seen to be intersectional with economic and ethno-national power relations in perpetuating a tendency to armed conflict in human societies. The feminism generated in antiwar activism tends to be holistic, and understands gender in patriarchy as a relation of power underpinned by coercion and violence. The cultural features of militarization and war readily perceived by women positioned in or close to armed conflict, and their sense of war as systemic and as a continuum, make its gendered nature visible. There are implications in thi...
This article attempts to trace some of the gendered sources in drawing great numbers of feminists al...
Feminists have agreed to disagree on the interaction between women and war. This is elucidated by me...
<p>This article focuses on the cost of ignoring gender when analyzing conflict and post-confli...
This article brings together research on civil wars and militarization with feminist scholarship on ...
This article brings together research on civil wars and militarization with feminist scholarship on ...
Research into the gendered nature of war experiences has provided rich ways of understanding how gen...
This article addresses the relevance of gender to understand the transformations of civil-military r...
Abstract in UndeterminedMAKING GENDER, MAKING WAR is a unique interdisciplinary collection of papers...
AbstrakKarya tulis ini mencoba untuk membuat suatu hubungan antara manusia dan peperangan, dan menga...
The gender dynamics of militarism have traditionally been seen as straightforward, given the cultura...
Central to the goal of ‘hearts and minds’ counterinsurgency is the need for knowledge, understanding...
Throughout history war has commonly been associated with the actions of men and the victimhood of wo...
Traditional academic investigations of war seldom link armed conflict to practices of racialization ...
This article addresses the relevance of gender to understand the transformations of civil-military r...
Feminists have agreed to disagree on the interaction between women and war. This is elucidated by me...
This article attempts to trace some of the gendered sources in drawing great numbers of feminists al...
Feminists have agreed to disagree on the interaction between women and war. This is elucidated by me...
<p>This article focuses on the cost of ignoring gender when analyzing conflict and post-confli...
This article brings together research on civil wars and militarization with feminist scholarship on ...
This article brings together research on civil wars and militarization with feminist scholarship on ...
Research into the gendered nature of war experiences has provided rich ways of understanding how gen...
This article addresses the relevance of gender to understand the transformations of civil-military r...
Abstract in UndeterminedMAKING GENDER, MAKING WAR is a unique interdisciplinary collection of papers...
AbstrakKarya tulis ini mencoba untuk membuat suatu hubungan antara manusia dan peperangan, dan menga...
The gender dynamics of militarism have traditionally been seen as straightforward, given the cultura...
Central to the goal of ‘hearts and minds’ counterinsurgency is the need for knowledge, understanding...
Throughout history war has commonly been associated with the actions of men and the victimhood of wo...
Traditional academic investigations of war seldom link armed conflict to practices of racialization ...
This article addresses the relevance of gender to understand the transformations of civil-military r...
Feminists have agreed to disagree on the interaction between women and war. This is elucidated by me...
This article attempts to trace some of the gendered sources in drawing great numbers of feminists al...
Feminists have agreed to disagree on the interaction between women and war. This is elucidated by me...
<p>This article focuses on the cost of ignoring gender when analyzing conflict and post-confli...