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Peace Processes Are Failing
Women
May 19, 2007 – (Economic & Social Research
Council) As societies emerge from conflict, men's dominance at all
levels of decision-making ensures women never feel truly secure
according to new research funded by the Economic and Social Research
Council (ESRC).
In a unique study of women's security and participation
in three post conflict societies—Northern Ireland, South Africa
and Lebanon—researchers found that women see security differently
from men. And because men dominate the institutions of peace-making
and peace-building, they often fail to consider the specific security
needs of women.
The investigation, which was part of the ESRC's
New Security Challenges Programme, was carried out through a research
partnership between the University of Ulster, Queen's University
Belfast and Democratic Dialogue and with research associates in
South Africa (Centre for Study of Violence and Reconciliation) and
Lebanon (Lebanese American University in Beirut).
In all three case studies, women saw security as
much more than physical safety. It was about feeling represented
in societal institutions, having a job, an education for their children,
a good health service and a feeling that society recognised the
specific interests of women.
"For me, the word security in Arabic is not
to be afraid. First, not to be afraid to be hungry, to move, to
think, and to be misjudged," explained a Lebanese woman to
the researchers.
Yet the ceasefires that signalled the ending of
the conflict in all three countries and made the first significant
step in bringing security and safety to people's lives had not been
followed by reconstruction efforts that freed women completely from
violence.
In Northern Ireland and South Africa women expressed
concern that 'normal' crime was increasing in communities and that
gender-based violence had increased, partly as a result of the demobilisation
of ex-combatants. In all three societies women criticised policing
in the transitional environment and found that the provision of
security remained heavily influenced by patriarchy and gender-insensitivity.
Professor Paddy Hillyard, from Queen's University,
Belfast and the leader of the project, said: "The dominant
institutions of the state following peace-processes remain overwhelming
male. Their transformation has to be part of the reconstruction
effort before women can feel truly secure".
All the evidence from the research indicates that
the UN resolution 1325 on Women Peace and Security must be fully
implemented so that women can play a full and equal part in societies
coming out of conflict. The UN resolution affirms the important
role of women in conflict resolution and peace building, and demands
that women be equally represented in all spheres of public life.
The South African experience clearly demonstrated
the critical importance of including women at all levels of decision-making.
In Northern Ireland the experience of the Women's Coalition provided
evidence that women operate in a manner very different to male politicians,
stressing issues that differ from traditional political preoccupations.
In Lebanon women played a much more limited role and their marginalisation
was reflected in women's perceptions of their own and their children's
insecurity.
The case studies show how women experience violence
in multiple ways and from a myriad of sources. From the family and
community, through societal structures of class and power, violence
against women continued during post-conflict transition. Measures
addressing the inequalities of power between men and women have
to be addressed. As one respondent commented: "There are still
too many men in the room when post-conflict settlements are negotiated.
From:http://www.huliq.com/22112/peace-processes-are-failing-women
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