Discourses in Transition: Re-Imagining Women's Security
This article employs data gathered in Lebanon, Northern Ireland and South Africa as part of a project entitled ‘Re-Imagining Women's Security and Participation in Post-Conflict Societies’. It refl ects on three different ‘imaginings’ of security–the state security discourse, the human security...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International relations (London) 2006-12, Vol.20 (4), p.487-502 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This article employs data gathered in Lebanon, Northern Ireland and South Africa as
part of a project entitled ‘Re-Imagining Women's Security and
Participation in Post-Conflict Societies’. It refl ects on three different
‘imaginings’ of security–the state security discourse,
the human security discourse and a gendered security approach–with the aim
of showing that security discourses are currently undergoing a process of transition
which parallels that taking place in post-conflict societies around the world. The
article is particularly concerned to explore how a gendered security approach might
empower women to re-imagine security in contextualised, bottom-up ways, and advocate
social transformation within the broader processes of post-conflict transition. In
order to consider women's demands for security policies and approaches in
the twenty-fi rst century, the article explores the direct testimony of women in
three post-conflict societies, with specifi c reference to three key areas of
security central to women's re-imaginings of the concept. |
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ISSN: | 0047-1178 1741-2862 |
DOI: | 10.1177/0047117806069410 |