In her article, Karie Cross Riddle suggests a complementary alternative to the Women, Peace, and Security agenda called “critical feminist justpeace,” a grounded theory of change based on women’s peacebuilding in Manipur, India.
Read MoreGlen Hill and Kabita Chakma present an original forensic examination of the mechanisms by which nationalism transforms into violence against those who are ethnically or religiously ‘other’.
Read MoreIn her latest paper Juliana Restrepo Sanín analyzes the case of Bolivia to show that perpetrators of violence against women in politics use democratic procedures, language, and institutions to attack and undermine women’s work in politics.
Read MoreMalena Nijensohn analyzes the “politics of the street” that emerged from 3 June 2015 on, and the process of articulation of a plurality of movements and organizations, in order to produce an anti-neoliberal feminism.
Read MoreAlexis Henshaw examines the role that gendered labor dynamics within the US foreign policy bureaucracy have played in shaping action on Women, Peace and Security.
Read MoreJosé O. Pérez explains how the 2016 impeachment process in Brazil functioned as a sexist form of psychological and political violence against Brazilian women that attempted to reaffirm the centrality and power of men within politics.
Read More