On the 24th January 2013, Chairman of the Joints Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta signed a directive which will open up ‘front-line combat’ posts in the US military to women. While this move puts the US military on similar terms to militaries in Germany, Australia and Canada (among others), the British forces continue to officially exclude women from such roles
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Are ‘homonormative’ narratives, full of labels for identities, becoming as rigid as heteronormative ...
In this post, LSE MSc Gender, Media, & Culture student Kimberly Killen explores her reaction to the ...
LSE’s Jescinta Izevbigie examines the obstacles faced by African women in entering the public life
In September 2013 international NGO ActionAid launched a new fundraising campaign in the UK that aim...
Emily Miles is a MSc student in Gender, Development and Globalisation at the LSE. She has written on...
As the rights of Malian women look set to be further eroded, LSE’s Dr Purna Sen reminds the good men...
Women who join the so-called ‘Islamic State’ (IS) in Syria have garnered considerable public interes...
In this post, Caitlin Fisher talks about the Rio+20 conference held in June 2012. She talks about th...
LSE’s Simone Datzberger explores the role of women’s networks in championing the rights of women in ...
Bobby Macaulay is a former researcher at the Yunus Centre for Social Business and Health and an expe...
Katrin Redfern is in the Gender, Policy and Inequalities MSc program at LSE and has written on gende...
The question of what makes civil wars so attractive, in the context of the supposed change in the na...
Natural birth, breastfeeding, dummies – the debates and online discussions can be vicious, keyboard ...
This past weekend, Amanda Conroy and Linnea Sandström, members of the Engenderings editorial collect...
As the general election looms large on the horizon, and the days of the current coalition government...
Are ‘homonormative’ narratives, full of labels for identities, becoming as rigid as heteronormative ...
In this post, LSE MSc Gender, Media, & Culture student Kimberly Killen explores her reaction to the ...
LSE’s Jescinta Izevbigie examines the obstacles faced by African women in entering the public life