What is it about?
This article argues that there are two barriers to operationalising the Women Peace and Security resolutions at the mission level that deserve further attention. The first barrier is that the legal architecture has flaws, and does not seem to be matched with a commensurate political commitment that shapes the high-level un response at the level of mandate. The second barrier relates to the institutional ability to deliver a peacekeeping mission with gender equality at its heart, related to the capacity of domestic militaries. The article argues that there needs to be deeper thinking about the capabilities of modern militaries to fulfil complex peace operations which contain the imperative for gender sensitive for conflict analysis, planning, security sector reform, disarmament, ddr, and disaster response. The slow progress of gender reform of militaries is hindering credible regulatory responses in UN missions. The article concludes that this creates lingering distrust of military intervention as a tool to protect women and girls, even from conflict-related sexual violence, even in a peace-keeping context.
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Why is it important?
Proud to be part of a Special Issue on 'Operationalizing Human Rights in Peace Missions'.
Perspectives
I am a great supporter of the WPS agenda at the Security Council, but being critical of how it affects women's lives on the ground is crucial.
Dr Susan G Harris Rimmer
Griffith University
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Barriers to Operationalising the “Women, Peace & Security” Doctrine in United Nations Peacekeeping Operations, Journal of International Peacekeeping, December 2016, Brill,
DOI: 10.1163/18754112-02001005.
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Resources
Women Peace and Security in Asia
Perspectives: Asia | Women, Peace & Security in Asia 23 Jun 2016 | 01:01:57 Presented by Kamala Chandrakirana, Indonesian advocate of human rights, justice and democracy and Associate Professor Susan Harris-Rimmer, Australian Research Council Future Fellow, Griffith University Law School. The Women, Peace and Security agenda appears in a cluster of UN Security Council Resolutions. The ground breaking Resolution 1325 was adopted in 2000 with an agenda framed on the premise that women and girls experience conflict differently from men and boys. It affirmed that women have an essential role in conflict prevention, peace building and post-conflict reconstruction and that governments are required to ensure women are represented in all levels of decision-making.
Women Peace and Security Academic Collective
The idea behind the Collective is to consolidate and extend academic feminist efforts around the UN’s ‘Women, Peace and Security’ agenda for the duration of Australia’s term on the UN Security Council (2013-14).
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