This article examines the apparent tension between power-sharing as the dominant approach to conflict settlement and the inclusion of women and provisions for gender equality as promoted through the Women, Peace and Security agenda. We argue that applying a feminist institutionalist (FI) lens - which attends to the interactions between political and social institutions, and the interplay between formal and informal rules, norms and practices - provides a means of explaining the so-called ‘gendered paradox of power-sharing’, including the gap between the promise of formal frameworks and outcomes for women in practice. We draw upon extant feminist research on three post-conflict power-sharing cases: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Northern Ireland, a...
Longstanding debates about the relationship between neoliberalism and feminism have been given new v...
In 2000, the United Nations (UN) launched the Women Peace and Security (WPS) agenda by adopting Secu...
How does the European Union (EU) include ‘gender’ within its support to security sector reform (SSR)...
Some feminist authors have argued that peace settlements have the potential to perpetuate gender ine...
Post-conflict interventions to ‘deal with’ violent pasts have moved from exception to global norm. E...
On the face of it, there is considerable potential for productive dialogue between sociological inst...
This article commences with a discussion of transitional constitutionaldesign and the ways in which ...
UN Security Council Resolution 1325 of 2000 provided that peace agreements should adopt a ‘gender pe...
This article makes the case for feminist IR to build knowledge of international institutions. It eme...
This Editorial introduces the Political Settlements Research Programme (PSRP) at the University of E...
Post-conflict interventions to ‘deal with’ violent pasts have moved from exception to global norm. E...
Consociational democracy has become the most influential paradigm in the field of power-sharing inst...
In parallel with the rise of the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) agenda after the adoption of Unite...
This chapter highlights the vital contributions and key challenges posed by feminist scholarship in ...
Feminist Institutionalism aims to understand and explain how power is distributed within institution...
Longstanding debates about the relationship between neoliberalism and feminism have been given new v...
In 2000, the United Nations (UN) launched the Women Peace and Security (WPS) agenda by adopting Secu...
How does the European Union (EU) include ‘gender’ within its support to security sector reform (SSR)...
Some feminist authors have argued that peace settlements have the potential to perpetuate gender ine...
Post-conflict interventions to ‘deal with’ violent pasts have moved from exception to global norm. E...
On the face of it, there is considerable potential for productive dialogue between sociological inst...
This article commences with a discussion of transitional constitutionaldesign and the ways in which ...
UN Security Council Resolution 1325 of 2000 provided that peace agreements should adopt a ‘gender pe...
This article makes the case for feminist IR to build knowledge of international institutions. It eme...
This Editorial introduces the Political Settlements Research Programme (PSRP) at the University of E...
Post-conflict interventions to ‘deal with’ violent pasts have moved from exception to global norm. E...
Consociational democracy has become the most influential paradigm in the field of power-sharing inst...
In parallel with the rise of the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) agenda after the adoption of Unite...
This chapter highlights the vital contributions and key challenges posed by feminist scholarship in ...
Feminist Institutionalism aims to understand and explain how power is distributed within institution...
Longstanding debates about the relationship between neoliberalism and feminism have been given new v...
In 2000, the United Nations (UN) launched the Women Peace and Security (WPS) agenda by adopting Secu...
How does the European Union (EU) include ‘gender’ within its support to security sector reform (SSR)...