Feminist peace or state co-optation? The Women, Peace and Security agenda in Myanmar

Author:

Olivius Elisabeth1,Hedström Jenny2,Mar Phyo Zin3

Affiliation:

1. Umeå University, Sweden

2. Swedish Defence University, Sweden

3. Independent researcher, Thailand

Abstract

This article engages with emerging debates about feminist peace and uses this concept to assess the ability of the Women, Peace and Security agenda to achieve gender-just change. We advance a conception of feminist peace as political conditions that allow women affected by conflict to articulate their visions of change and influence the construction of post-war order. Applying this to a case study of Women, Peace and Security practice in Myanmar, we demonstrate that features of how international aid is organised, combined with the Myanmar government’s interest in excluding critical voices, limit the ability of Women, Peace and Security practices to contribute to feminist peace. This highlights the potential for illiberal post-war states to obstruct and co-opt the Women, Peace and Security agenda, and shows how the women most directly affected by armed conflict are often the least able to participate in, benefit from and inform Women, Peace and Security practices.

Funder

Swedish Research Council

the Swedish Foundation for the Social Sciences and Humanities

Publisher

Bristol University Press

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,Gender Studies

Reference51 articles.

1. The Localisation of Women, Peace and Security in Myanmar,2018

2. Watering the leaves, starving the roots. The status of financing for women’s rights organizing and gender equality;Arutyunova, A.,2013

3. The rise of an anti-politics machinery: peace, civil society and the focus on results in Myanmar;Bächtold, S.,2015

4. Introduction: development challenges in Myanmar: political development and politics of development intertwined;Bjarnegård, E.,2020

5. Cultures of Peace: The Hidden Side of History;Boulding, E.,2000

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