This article engages with emerging debates about feminist peace and uses this concept to assess the ability of the Women, Peace and Security agenda to achieve gender-just change. We advance a conception of feminist peace as political conditions that allow women affected by conflict to articulate their visions of change and influence the construction of post-war order. Applying this to a case study of Women, Peace and Security practice in Myanmar, we demonstrate that features of how international aid is organised, combined with the Myanmar government’s interest in excluding critical voices, limit the ability of Women, Peace and Security practices to contribute to feminist peace. This highlights the potential for illiberal post-war states to ...
This policy brief presents recommendations for how international development and peacebuilding organ...
This article examines why the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda has been so challenging to impl...
Feminist scholars have convincingly demonstrated how militarism and nationalism rely on the (re)prod...
This article engages with emerging debates about feminist peace and uses this concept to assess the ...
This article contributes to the discussion of what feminist peace entails and how women peace activi...
This thesis explores the gendered dynamics of everyday peace through analysing women’s experience of...
Conventional assumptions locating peacebuilding temporally after violence have largely prevented exp...
This article draws on feminist perspectives on the everyday to explore women’s everyday experiences ...
Ethnic division and inequality lie at the heart of Myanmar's internal conflicts. In these conflicts,...
This report analyses the work on implementing the Women Peace and Security(WPS) agenda in Myanmar. A...
This article explores how female peace activist's experiences of armed conflict drive their activism...
It is generally recognised that women should not only be included in peacebuilding but that they are...
Why and how do women engage in peacebuilding efforts across conflict divides? This dissertation coin...
This paper seeks to understand the different progress of gender equality between Myanmar and Nepal, ...
<p>The goal of the project is to understand the role that gender provisions in peace agreements play...
This policy brief presents recommendations for how international development and peacebuilding organ...
This article examines why the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda has been so challenging to impl...
Feminist scholars have convincingly demonstrated how militarism and nationalism rely on the (re)prod...
This article engages with emerging debates about feminist peace and uses this concept to assess the ...
This article contributes to the discussion of what feminist peace entails and how women peace activi...
This thesis explores the gendered dynamics of everyday peace through analysing women’s experience of...
Conventional assumptions locating peacebuilding temporally after violence have largely prevented exp...
This article draws on feminist perspectives on the everyday to explore women’s everyday experiences ...
Ethnic division and inequality lie at the heart of Myanmar's internal conflicts. In these conflicts,...
This report analyses the work on implementing the Women Peace and Security(WPS) agenda in Myanmar. A...
This article explores how female peace activist's experiences of armed conflict drive their activism...
It is generally recognised that women should not only be included in peacebuilding but that they are...
Why and how do women engage in peacebuilding efforts across conflict divides? This dissertation coin...
This paper seeks to understand the different progress of gender equality between Myanmar and Nepal, ...
<p>The goal of the project is to understand the role that gender provisions in peace agreements play...
This policy brief presents recommendations for how international development and peacebuilding organ...
This article examines why the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda has been so challenging to impl...
Feminist scholars have convincingly demonstrated how militarism and nationalism rely on the (re)prod...