This article demonstrates that the inability of the United Nations Women, Peace and Security agenda to realize greater peace and security for women in post-war states stems to a great extent from its failure to engage deeply with the materiality of women’s lives under economic empowerment projects. We argue that the Women, Peace and Security agenda reproduces a neoliberal understanding of economic empowerment that inadequately captures the reality of women’s lives in post-war settings for two reasons: first, it views formal and informal economic activities as dichotomous and separate, rather than as intertwined and constitutive of each other; and, second, it conceptualizes agency as individual, disembodied, abstract, universalizing and conf...
Attempts to integrate feminist security studies (FSS) and feminist global political economy (GPE) we...
This article has three aims. First, it takes issue with the argument of international economic insti...
Post-conflict interventions to ‘deal with’ violent pasts have moved from exception to global norm. E...
This article demonstrates that the inability of the United Nations Women, Peace and Security agenda ...
This article demonstrates that the inability of the United Nations Women, Peace and Security agenda...
This article demonstrates that the inability of the United Nations Women, Peace and Security agenda ...
Attempts to integrate feminist security studies (FSS) and feminist global political economy (GPE) we...
This article examines why the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda has been so challenging to impl...
Girls and women have become the public faces of development today, through the success of “Gender Eq...
In recent years, the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda have paid a higher degree of attention t...
This Article will examine whether efforts to implement the Resolution suggest new ways to address th...
Feminist International Political Economy (IPE), with its focus on the gendered dimensions of social ...
Feminist discourses have changed the vision of the issues and sites of political encounter that are ...
Security studies and international relations have conventionally relegated gendered analysis to the ...
Attempts to integrate feminist security studies (FSS) and feminist global political economy (GPE) we...
Attempts to integrate feminist security studies (FSS) and feminist global political economy (GPE) we...
This article has three aims. First, it takes issue with the argument of international economic insti...
Post-conflict interventions to ‘deal with’ violent pasts have moved from exception to global norm. E...
This article demonstrates that the inability of the United Nations Women, Peace and Security agenda ...
This article demonstrates that the inability of the United Nations Women, Peace and Security agenda...
This article demonstrates that the inability of the United Nations Women, Peace and Security agenda ...
Attempts to integrate feminist security studies (FSS) and feminist global political economy (GPE) we...
This article examines why the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda has been so challenging to impl...
Girls and women have become the public faces of development today, through the success of “Gender Eq...
In recent years, the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda have paid a higher degree of attention t...
This Article will examine whether efforts to implement the Resolution suggest new ways to address th...
Feminist International Political Economy (IPE), with its focus on the gendered dimensions of social ...
Feminist discourses have changed the vision of the issues and sites of political encounter that are ...
Security studies and international relations have conventionally relegated gendered analysis to the ...
Attempts to integrate feminist security studies (FSS) and feminist global political economy (GPE) we...
Attempts to integrate feminist security studies (FSS) and feminist global political economy (GPE) we...
This article has three aims. First, it takes issue with the argument of international economic insti...
Post-conflict interventions to ‘deal with’ violent pasts have moved from exception to global norm. E...