Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 320
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7425-3632-6 • Hardback • February 2005 • $159.00 • (£123.00)
978-0-7425-3633-3 • Paperback • February 2005 • $67.00 • (£52.00)
978-0-7425-8132-6 • eBook • February 2005 • $63.50 • (£49.00)
Dyan Mazurana is senior research fellow at the Feinstein International Famine Center, Tufts University. Angela Raven-Roberts is director of research and programs at the Feinstein Famine Center, Tufts University. Jane Parpart is professor of history at Dalhousie University.
Chapter 1 Gender, Conflict, Peacekeeping
Chapter 2 Gender, Complex Political Emergencies, and International Intervention
Chapter 3 Gender and the Causes and Consequences of Armed Conflict
Chapter 4 Gender Mainstreaming in United Nations Peacekeeping Operations: Talking the Talk, Tripping over the Walk
Chapter 5 Gender, Peacekeeping, and International Humanitarian, Criminal, and Human Rights Law
Chapter 6 Prosecution of Gender-based Crimes in International Law
Chapter 7 The Renewed Popularity of the Rule of Law: Implications for Women, Impunity, and Peacekeeping
Chapter 8 Inside Peacekeeping Operations
Chapter 9 Peacekeeping Trends and Their Gender Implications for Regional Peacekeeping Forces in Africa: Progress and Challenges
Chapter 10 Gender, War, and Peace in Mozambique and Angola: Advances and Absences
Chapter 11 Peacekeeping, Alphabet Soup, and Violence Against Women in the Balkans
Chapter 12 The Namibian Peace Operation in a Gender Context
Chapter 13 Peacekeeping Operations, International Intervention and Gender-Just Peacemaking and Peacebuilding
Chapter 14 The Post-Conflict Postscript: Gender and Policing in Peace Operations
Chapter 15 The Guatemalan Peace Accords: Critical Reflections
Chapter 16 Les Femmes Aux Milles Bras: Building Peace in Rwanda
Chapter 17 State-making, Peacemaking, and the Inscription of Gendered Politics into Peace: Lessons from Angola
Chapter 18 Mainstreaming Gender in United Nations Peacekeeping Training: Examples from East Timor, Ethiopia, and Eritrea
Chapter 19 What if Patriarchy is The Big Picture? An Afterword
This volume explores how gender has become a central factor in shaping current thinking about the causes and consequences of armed conflict, complex emergencies, and reconstruction. It represents a span of knowledge and experience about international intervention in local crises. Presenting examples from Angola, Bosnia, East Timor, El Salvador, the former Yugoslavia, Guatemala, Haiti, Kosovo, Liberia, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, and Serbia, the authors offer insights for future peacekeeping and humanitarian missions...
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This invaluable study makes compelling linkages between the political use of gender in conflict and peacekeeping and the blurring of the lines between victims, perpetrators, and combatants in today?s wars. It is a must for activists, academics, policymakers, and the general public in our militarized world....
— Ariane Brunet