1 / 10

Protectors and Protected: Gender, Peacekeeping and Power

Protectors and Protected: Gender, Peacekeeping and Power. International Parliamentary Conference on Peacebuilding : Tackling State Fragility Marsha Henry Gender Institute, LSE m.g.henry@lse.ac.uk. Women in Peacekeeping Missions. Women as Peacekeepers Military Police Civilian

juan
Download Presentation

Protectors and Protected: Gender, Peacekeeping and Power

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Protectors and Protected: Gender, Peacekeeping and Power International Parliamentary Conference on Peacebuilding: Tackling State Fragility Marsha Henry Gender Institute, LSE m.g.henry@lse.ac.uk

  2. Women in Peacekeeping Missions • Women as Peacekeepers • Military • Police • Civilian • What are women’s experiences? • 1) What is their status in and outside of their own forces?

  3. Women in Peacekeeping Missions • Value • Specialism and training • Sex segregation • Military ethos? • 2) What is their professional remit? • Duties • Skills

  4. Women in Peacekeeping Missions • 3) What is their relationship with local men and women? • Interaction • 4) What country are they from? • Contribution to missions • Pay • Reputation

  5. Women in Peacekeeping Missions • 5) What impact do they have on the local population • Role models • Reduction in SEA • 6) What are the underlying assumption of introducing female peacekeepers? • Sisterhood • “Third world’

  6. Masculinities • Problems with incorporation • Women as victims, men as perpetrators • Multiple masculinities • Explore alternative models at work

  7. Gender-Based Violence • Rethink violence with a gender base • i.e. boy soldiers • Spectrum of gender and violence • Violence with a sexual base • Violence as a result of gender and sexuality • Women as perpetrators • Situations where GBV not occurring

  8. Sexual Exploitation and Abuse • Rethink definitions of Exploitation • Vulnerability and Agency • Men and boys • Exploitation without sex

  9. Power • DPKO recognises the power relationship between peacekeepers and local people • Less time focussed on single forms of exploitation—expand • Intersection (‘race’) • Peacekeeping economies • Images of Peacekeepers and Reputation of UN • Militarisation? • Politics of Development?

  10. Recommendations • Challenge national governments • To recruit more women into their militaries and not just police forces • To recruit more ‘gender’ trained personnel • Training and Awareness • Discussions of sexuality and sexual behaviour • Discussions of racism, not ‘culture’ • Discussions of economic power • Humility • Shift focus from image to practice

More Related