War is an inherently social process, from the mobilization of new, armed organizations, to the relational aftershocks of violence affecting families and local communities. This essay synthesizes existing feminist research on dynamics of conflict and peacebuilding and brings a social network approach to understanding gendered patterns of intersectional inequality. It presents a framework for understanding how civil war affects social structures vis-à-vis personal support networks, and in turn how that can constrain or enable women’s and men’s social and economic opportunities. Through a descriptive analysis of communities in Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, I argue that war’s social processes, and ongoing militarization in particula...
Based on empirical research among women's antiwar organizations worldwide, the article derives a fem...
Violent conflicts come with a high level of wreckage on lives, property, and survival networks. Arme...
Women’s rights are not only acknowledged as fundamental human rights, but have also been linked to m...
The 1990s are marked by unprecedented mobilisation for armed conflict at the local or state level. W...
This chapter highlights the vital contributions and key challenges posed by feminist scholarship in ...
What are the social legacies of civil war and how do they differ for men and women? Despite a growin...
This article uses a gender lens to explore how conflict affects men and women differently. It examin...
This article proposes to study the plight of women in conflict zones through the lens of social netw...
This paper explores the importance of gender sensitive analysis of conflict constructed as ethnic st...
Since 1989, the world has seen civil war replace traditional war as the prevailing paradigm of confl...
The gender dynamics of militarism have traditionally been seen as straightforward, given the cultura...
This article reviews the literature on gender, conflict, and peace. In traditional security studies ...
Summaries Conflict has only recently been examined in the context of development studies and a gend...
Conventional stories about conflicts often miss the role of everyday practices in escalating and de-...
Throughout history war has commonly been associated with the actions of men and the victimhood of wo...
Based on empirical research among women's antiwar organizations worldwide, the article derives a fem...
Violent conflicts come with a high level of wreckage on lives, property, and survival networks. Arme...
Women’s rights are not only acknowledged as fundamental human rights, but have also been linked to m...
The 1990s are marked by unprecedented mobilisation for armed conflict at the local or state level. W...
This chapter highlights the vital contributions and key challenges posed by feminist scholarship in ...
What are the social legacies of civil war and how do they differ for men and women? Despite a growin...
This article uses a gender lens to explore how conflict affects men and women differently. It examin...
This article proposes to study the plight of women in conflict zones through the lens of social netw...
This paper explores the importance of gender sensitive analysis of conflict constructed as ethnic st...
Since 1989, the world has seen civil war replace traditional war as the prevailing paradigm of confl...
The gender dynamics of militarism have traditionally been seen as straightforward, given the cultura...
This article reviews the literature on gender, conflict, and peace. In traditional security studies ...
Summaries Conflict has only recently been examined in the context of development studies and a gend...
Conventional stories about conflicts often miss the role of everyday practices in escalating and de-...
Throughout history war has commonly been associated with the actions of men and the victimhood of wo...
Based on empirical research among women's antiwar organizations worldwide, the article derives a fem...
Violent conflicts come with a high level of wreckage on lives, property, and survival networks. Arme...
Women’s rights are not only acknowledged as fundamental human rights, but have also been linked to m...