This article reflects on the ten-year anniversary of \u27Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security\u27 (hereinafter, Resolution 1325\u27). The article contextualises the Security Council\u27s approach within feminist legal thinking, using Resolution 1325 as a spinboard for increased feminist conversations on the recurrent themes of essentialism, victim feminism and praxis. It is argued that feminist action in the Security Council should extend these debates. To this end, the article concludes with reflection on the possibility of force to save women, arguing that this fourth axis of feminist debate be taken up with some urgency by feminist scholars and activists
Cora Weiss, co-drafter of what became UN Security Council Resolution 1325, noted in 2011 that the pu...
Security Council Resolution 1325 (2000) forms part of the United Nations approach to international p...
Security Council resolution 1325 was a landmark in collective security, making the link between wome...
This article reflects on the ten-year anniversary of \u27Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, ...
This paper argues that the use of the Security Council to develop feminist and women’s activism on w...
Here, we introduce the articles that comprise this special issue of IFJP, entitled, ‘Critically Exam...
This Article will examine whether efforts to implement the Resolution suggest new ways to address th...
United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 on ‘women, peace and security’ was passed in 2000 to...
The UN Security Council Resolution 1325 is the first resolution on women.s rights in armed conflict si...
UN Security Council Resolution 1325 and the successive thematic resolutions together with a variety ...
Conflict affects and engages men and women in different ways. United Nations Security Council’s Reso...
On October 31, 2000, United Nations Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 1325 was passed unanimously....
This article analyzes the limitations of the United Nations Security Council Resolution on Women, Pe...
women, peace and security.2 Resolution 1325 is often called a landmark resolution because it represe...
The inclusion of women in security at the highest institutional level the United Nations Security Co...
Cora Weiss, co-drafter of what became UN Security Council Resolution 1325, noted in 2011 that the pu...
Security Council Resolution 1325 (2000) forms part of the United Nations approach to international p...
Security Council resolution 1325 was a landmark in collective security, making the link between wome...
This article reflects on the ten-year anniversary of \u27Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, ...
This paper argues that the use of the Security Council to develop feminist and women’s activism on w...
Here, we introduce the articles that comprise this special issue of IFJP, entitled, ‘Critically Exam...
This Article will examine whether efforts to implement the Resolution suggest new ways to address th...
United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 on ‘women, peace and security’ was passed in 2000 to...
The UN Security Council Resolution 1325 is the first resolution on women.s rights in armed conflict si...
UN Security Council Resolution 1325 and the successive thematic resolutions together with a variety ...
Conflict affects and engages men and women in different ways. United Nations Security Council’s Reso...
On October 31, 2000, United Nations Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 1325 was passed unanimously....
This article analyzes the limitations of the United Nations Security Council Resolution on Women, Pe...
women, peace and security.2 Resolution 1325 is often called a landmark resolution because it represe...
The inclusion of women in security at the highest institutional level the United Nations Security Co...
Cora Weiss, co-drafter of what became UN Security Council Resolution 1325, noted in 2011 that the pu...
Security Council Resolution 1325 (2000) forms part of the United Nations approach to international p...
Security Council resolution 1325 was a landmark in collective security, making the link between wome...