Gender, Conflict, Peace, and UNSC Resolution 1325

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1325
A32=Antal Berkes
A32=Aurora E. Bewicke
A32=Corey Barr
A32=Elisabeth Porter
A32=Jan Marie Fritz
A32=Margaret Owen
A32=Onyinyechukwu Onyido
A32=Seema Shekhawat
A32=Veronica Fynn Bruey
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781498554374
  • Weight: 599g
  • Dimensions: 158 x 239mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jan 2018
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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There is an increasing amount of literature on various aspects of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325. While appreciating this scholarship, this volume highlights some of the omissions and concerns to make a quality addition to the ongoing discourse on the intersection of gender with peace and security with a focus on 1325. It aims at a reality-check of the impressive to-dos list as the seventeen years since the Resolution passed provide an occasion to pause and ponder over the gap between the aspirations and the reality, the ideal and the practice, the promises and the action, the euphoria and the despair. The volume compiles carefully selected essays woven around Resolution 1325 to tease out the intricacies within both the Resolution and its implementation. Through a cocktail of well-known and some lesser-known case studies, the volume addresses complicated realities with the intention of impacting policy-making and the academic fields of gender, peace, and security. The volume emphasizes the significance of transforming formal peace making processes, and making them gender inclusive and gender sensitive by critically examining some omissions in the challenges that the Resolution implementation confronts. The major question the volume seeks to address is this: where are women positioned in the formal peace-making seventeen years after the adoption of Resolution 1325?
Seema Shekhawat is a political scientist with a PhD in gender, conflict, and displacement from the University of Jammu.