12823oam 22006132 450 991077360480332120240618131615.00-429-65676-90-429-65676-90-429-02416-90-429-65920-210.4324/9780429024160(CKB)4940000000597325(MiAaPQ)EBC6461762(OCoLC)1202911050(OCoLC-P)1202911050(FlBoTFG)9780429024160(EXLCZ)99494000000059732520201008d2020 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierRoutledge handbook of feminist peace research /edited by Tarja Väyrynen, Swati Parashar, Élise Féron, Catia Confortini1st ed.London :Routledge,2020.1 online resource (466 pages)Includes index.0-367-10984-0 Intro -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- contents -- Acknowledgements -- Contributors -- Introduction -- Feminist analysis and critical feminist peace research -- Feminist peace -- Postcoloniality, decoloniality -- Organisation of the handbook -- Way forward/expectations -- References -- PART I. Methodologies and genealogies -- 1. Genealogies of feminist peace research: Themes, thinkers, and turns -- Introduction -- Multiple genealogies - better insights? -- Feminist peace research hits its stride -- Tensions in scholarship and activism -- Notes -- References -- 2. Feminist care ethics: Contributions to peace theory -- Introduction -- The personal is political -- Conflict resolution -- Care and justice -- Relational ontology -- Epistemological situatedness -- Socialising care -- Care-work and security for citizens -- Care as work -- Globalising care -- International security and peace -- The value of care -- Notes -- References -- 3. Methodologies for feminist peace research -- Introduction -- What is feminist methodology? -- What are feminist peace methodologies? -- Situated knowledge through ethnography -- Discourses and representations -- Quantitative methodologies - looking for patterns -- Conclusions and new questions -- References -- 4. Queer theories of peace and security -- Introduction -- From invisibility to hypervisibility -- Queering space, borders, and geopolitics -- On the right side of history" - queer perspectives on time -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- 5. Everyday peace in critical feminist theory -- Introduction -- Everyday peace and politics of locations -- Peace and cold war -- Feminist peace post-cold/man war -- But do we really care? -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- 6. Feminist responses to conflict: Within, against, and beyond the law -- Introduction -- Feminist engagements with international laws.Feminist engagements against law -- Beyond the law: the creation of new social imaginaries -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 7. Gendering education for peace: Critical perspectives -- Introduction -- Gendering peace education: the trajectory -- Critical peace education: taking the feminist agenda forward? -- Concluding remarks -- Notes -- References -- 8. Women, patriarchy, and traditional methods: A postcolonial feminist critique of pashtun Jirga -- Introduction -- Women, patriarchy, and traditional conflict resolution -- Pashtunwali" and Pashtun "Jirga" in Pakistan -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- PART II. Politics, power, and violence -- 9. Continuums of violence: Feminist peace research and gender-based violence -- Introduction -- Continuums of violence -- Private/public -- Wartime/peacetime -- Conclusion -- References -- 10. Sexual Violence in Times of War and Peace -- Introduction -- Sexual violence in war -- Only sexual violence in armed conflict? -- Sexual violence in "peace -- Conclusion: sexual violence in war and peace -- Note -- References -- 11. Feminist peace versus weapons of violence -- Introduction -- Gendered impacts from the use of weapons -- Structural and normative issues -- New technologies of violence -- Diversity versus power -- A way forward -- References -- 12. Feminist responses to violent extremism -- Introduction -- Section 1. Understanding terrorist violence -- Section 1A Researching terrorism -- Section 1B Findings - forms of terrorist violence -- Direct violence -- Structural violence -- Cultural violence -- Section 1C Controversies - misogynist violence -- Section 2. Understanding counterterrorism efforts -- Section 2A Findings - critiquing P/CVE and CT -- Gender stereotypes in P/CVE and CT -- Gender exclusions in P/CVE and CT -- Securitised goals of P/CVE and CT.Section 2C Controversies: feminist counterterrorism? -- Future research and conclusion -- Note -- References -- 13. Armed resistance and feminist activism -- Introduction -- Women's activism vs feminist activism in war and peace -- Women's activism: from anti-war movements to peacebuilding -- Tracing women in armed resistance movements -- Feminist activism and armed resistance in Myanmar -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 14. Feminism. Militarism. Whatever.: Civil-military operations in Afghanistan -- Introduction -- Militarism -- Combating or contributing to militarism? Human security and Women, Peace and Security (WPS) -- Afghanistan: "there is no military solution -- Gender initiatives -- Conclusion -- References -- 15. Can armed service be emancipatory?: Complex answers from Nepal and the United States -- Introduction -- Participation of women in armed conflict -- Is fighting in an armed group a sign of gender emancipation? -- Female combatants in the Maoist insurgency in Nepal: a complex case -- From hope and purpose to marginalisation and despair -- U.S. women soldiers "break the brass ceiling -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 16. Silencing and voicing the subaltern -- Introduction: silencing/voicing and the decolonial feminist lens -- The ontological-cultural dimension of silencing -- The epistemic and economic dimension of silencing -- Conclusion -- References -- PART III. Institutional and societal interventions -- Editors' introduction -- 17. Feminist approaches to peace and conflict: International human rights law disappearing and re-emerging? -- Introduction -- IHRL occupying a central place in feminist analysis of peace and conflict -- Equivocal attitudes to IHRL in feminist peace and conflict scholarship -- IHRL at the margin of feminist scholarship on WPS -- Lack of diversity in feminist peace and conflict research.Conclusion -- References -- 18. Foreign policy and diplomacy: Feminist interventions -- Introduction -- Unpacking foreign policy and diplomacy in practice -- Feminist critiques of mainstream approaches to foreign policy and diplomacy -- Impact on feminist intervention on foreign policy and diplomatic practices -- Blind spots in feminist approaches to foreign policy -- Conclusion: towards a feminist foreign policy -- References -- 19. Women, peace, and security -- Introduction -- Women and peace and security: key themes -- Institutionalisation of the WPS agenda: political implications -- From policy to practice: major contestations -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- 20. Peacekeeping: Feminist debates and demands -- Introduction -- Peacekeeping as international intervention -- Feminist critiques of peacekeeping -- Feminist demands for peacekeeping reform -- Conclusion -- References -- 21. Not enough soldier, not enough civilian: The continuing under-representation of female soldiers in Disarmament, Demobilisation, and Reintegration (DDR) programmes -- Introduction -- Introduction to Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration programmes -- Why female soldiers continue to be under-represented in DDR programmes? -- Incomprehensive representation, inadequate knowledge -- Confusing guidelines -- Practical reasons -- Ideological prioritisation -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- 22. Trauma, memory, and peacebuilding -- Introduction -- Conceptualising trauma: individual collective -- Memory as gendered: feminist lenses -- The role of trauma and memory in peacebuilding: feminist critical engagements -- Trauma, gender, and transitional justice -- Trauma, memory, and postwar agency -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- 23. Feminism and peace movements: Engendering anti-nuclear activism -- Introduction -- What is feminist anti-nuclear activism?.Cold War feminist anti-nuclear activism -- Post-Cold War feminist anti-nuclear activism -- Future research -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 24. The arts as a peacebuilding approach: Feminist contributions and directions -- Introduction -- The arts, peacebuilding, and feminist peace research -- Aesthetics: building everyday relationships and solidarity -- Emotions: incorporating ways of knowing and feeling besides the rational -- Inclusion: a platform for silenced voices -- Conclusion and future directions -- References -- PART IV. Bodies, sexualities, and health -- Editors' introduction -- 25. Bodies/biopolitics/identity: Feminist perspectives -- Introduction -- Biopolitics and feminist theory -- Two bodies of biopolitics -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 26. Embodying transformations: Feminism, the yoga body, and social change -- Introduction -- Yoga and the politics of the body -- Women, yoga, and self-care -- Women and yoga -- Feminism, the body, and yoga -- Building a feminist yoga practice -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 27. Sexual health and world peace -- Introduction -- Sexual health and feminist conflict analysis -- Sexual health and feminist peacebuilding -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 28. Sexual orientation and gender identity or expression (SOGIE) in violent conflict and peacebuilding -- Introduction -- Heightened and layered vulnerabilities -- Post-conflict peacebuilding: a moment of opportunity? -- Gender and sexual minorities in Colombia -- WPS and LGBTQ experiences -- Queer inclusion in feminist peace research -- Notes -- References -- 29. Men, masculinities, peace, and violence: A multi-level overview on justice and conflict -- Introduction -- Critical perspectives on men, masculinities, and violence -- Peace and conflict at multiple levels: connections with men and masculinities.Working post-conflict to transform men and masculinities, and contribute towards justice.This handbook provides a comprehensive overview of feminist approaches to questions of violence, justice, and peace. The volume argues that critical feminist thinking is necessary to analyse core peace and conflict issues and is fundamental to thinking about solutions to global problems and promoting peaceful conflict transformation. Contributions to the volume consider questions at the intersection of feminism, gender, peace, justice, and violence through interdisciplinary perspectives. The handbook engages with multiple feminisms, diverse policy concerns, and works with diverse theoretical and methodological contributions. The volume covers the gendered nature of five major themes: Methodologies and genealogies (including theories, concepts, histories, methodologies) Politics, power, and violence (including the ways in which violence is created, maintained, andreproduced, and the gendered dynamics of its instantiations) Institutional and societal interventions to promote peace (including those by national, regional, and international organisations, and civil society or informal groups/bodies) Bodies, sexualities, and health (including sexual health, biopolitics, sexual orientation) Global inequalities (including climate change, aid, global political economy). This handbook will be of great interest to students of peace and conflict studies, security studies, feminist studies, gender studies, international relations, and politics. Chapter 9 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license available at https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Handbook-of-Feminist-Peace-Research/Vayrynen-Parashar-Feron-Confortini/p/book/9780367109844Women and peaceFeminismWomenPolitical activityWomen and peace.Feminism.WomenPolitical activity.305.42Väyrynen TarjaParashar SwatiFéron EliseConfortini Catia CeciliaOCoLC-POCoLC-PBOOK9910773604803321Routledge handbook of feminist peace research3662381UNINA