Feminists have agreed to disagree on the interaction between women and war. This is elucidated by means of a critical assessment of the various positions of feminists regarding comprehensive human security in general and military security in particular. It is argued that a feminist perspective has the potential to raise consciousness and contextualise women’s insecurity by employing gender as a principle of social organisation. This argument is supported by the contention that the relationship between women and war may be characterised as a fractious holism dominated by difference and multiplicity rather than harmony and stability. Such an imperfect holismgives rise to a plurality of ambiguities and complexities in relation to globalisation...
In the immediate aftermath of armed conflict, security is critical to the possibility that refugees,...
Feminists have welcomed the human security concept for the challenge it poses to national and state ...
Traditional academic investigations of war seldom link armed conflict to practices of racialization ...
Feminists have agreed to disagree on the interaction between women and war. This is elucidated by me...
Security discourse that was long cons idered as scientific, objective and gender neutral is one subj...
Based on empirical research among women's antiwar organizations worldwide, the article derives a fem...
N ational security discourses are typically part of the elite world ofmasculine high politics. State...
Throughout history war has commonly been associated with the actions of men and the victimhood of wo...
Over the past 30 years, feminist approaches to International Relations have become an integral part ...
This article takes a critical stance towards the rhetoric of protecting and liberating Afghan women ...
Security studies and international relations have conventionally relegated gendered analysis to the ...
The gender dynamics of militarism have traditionally been seen as straightforward, given the cultura...
This dissertation examines feminist claims about the relationship between women and peace and men an...
This chapter explores the links between women, peace, and security in the activities of internationa...
A feminist perspective can make security discourse more reflective of its own normative assumptions....
In the immediate aftermath of armed conflict, security is critical to the possibility that refugees,...
Feminists have welcomed the human security concept for the challenge it poses to national and state ...
Traditional academic investigations of war seldom link armed conflict to practices of racialization ...
Feminists have agreed to disagree on the interaction between women and war. This is elucidated by me...
Security discourse that was long cons idered as scientific, objective and gender neutral is one subj...
Based on empirical research among women's antiwar organizations worldwide, the article derives a fem...
N ational security discourses are typically part of the elite world ofmasculine high politics. State...
Throughout history war has commonly been associated with the actions of men and the victimhood of wo...
Over the past 30 years, feminist approaches to International Relations have become an integral part ...
This article takes a critical stance towards the rhetoric of protecting and liberating Afghan women ...
Security studies and international relations have conventionally relegated gendered analysis to the ...
The gender dynamics of militarism have traditionally been seen as straightforward, given the cultura...
This dissertation examines feminist claims about the relationship between women and peace and men an...
This chapter explores the links between women, peace, and security in the activities of internationa...
A feminist perspective can make security discourse more reflective of its own normative assumptions....
In the immediate aftermath of armed conflict, security is critical to the possibility that refugees,...
Feminists have welcomed the human security concept for the challenge it poses to national and state ...
Traditional academic investigations of war seldom link armed conflict to practices of racialization ...