This blog is based on research commissioned by the International Peace Institute. For a fuller account of the research and its findings see: At the Nexus of Participation and Protection: Protection-Related Barriers to Women’s Participation in Northern Ireland. Catherine Turner and Aisling Swaine explore the intersection between women’s participation and protection in the context of Northern Ireland illustrating the tensions and connections between the two which not only highlight the continued relevance of the Women, Peace and Security Agenda, but also the need for it to engage with this tension on a more meaningful level
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International norms on intrastate conflicts, such as United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325...
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This blog is part of the WPS Forum on 15 Years of UK WPS. Jonna Monaghan and Aisling Swaine discuss ...
Some feminist authors have argued that peace settlements have the potential to perpetuate gender ine...
The Northern Ireland Women’s Coalition (NIWC) was a political party established in 1996 and dissolve...
United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 on ‘women, peace and security’ was passed in 2000 to...
While the global agenda on Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) has a stated focus on building women’s a...
Women have long been recognised as having played a major and visible role in peace movements. Debate...
Women\u27s peacemaking skills have long empowered them as voices for reconciliation in divided socie...
Paper presented at the conference “The Impact of Devolution on Everyday Life: 1999-2009”, Newman Ho...
The focus of this essay is on the critical and various roles, still largely unrecognised, played by ...
2019 has been an important year for the LSE Centre for Women, Peace and Security Blog. We have run a...
With over 70% of the global healthcare workforce made up of women and many more shouldering caregivi...
The Women, Peace and Security or Gender Peace and Security (WPS/GPS) agenda has expanded significant...
A decade ago, Dianne Otto identified the trouble at the heart of the Women, Peace and Security (WPS)...
International norms on intrastate conflicts, such as United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325...
This article presents the first feminist doctrinal textual analysis of cross-pillar synergies within...
This blog is part of the WPS Forum on 15 Years of UK WPS. Jonna Monaghan and Aisling Swaine discuss ...
Some feminist authors have argued that peace settlements have the potential to perpetuate gender ine...
The Northern Ireland Women’s Coalition (NIWC) was a political party established in 1996 and dissolve...
United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 on ‘women, peace and security’ was passed in 2000 to...
While the global agenda on Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) has a stated focus on building women’s a...
Women have long been recognised as having played a major and visible role in peace movements. Debate...
Women\u27s peacemaking skills have long empowered them as voices for reconciliation in divided socie...
Paper presented at the conference “The Impact of Devolution on Everyday Life: 1999-2009”, Newman Ho...
The focus of this essay is on the critical and various roles, still largely unrecognised, played by ...
2019 has been an important year for the LSE Centre for Women, Peace and Security Blog. We have run a...
With over 70% of the global healthcare workforce made up of women and many more shouldering caregivi...
The Women, Peace and Security or Gender Peace and Security (WPS/GPS) agenda has expanded significant...
A decade ago, Dianne Otto identified the trouble at the heart of the Women, Peace and Security (WPS)...