BOOK: Women and Security Governance in Africa, Edited by: Funmi Olonisakin and Awino Okech

Source: 
African Gender Institute
Duration: 
Sunday, October 17, 2010 - 20:00
Countries: 
Africa
PeaceWomen Consolidated Themes: 
Reconstruction and Peacebuilding
Initiative Type: 
Other

Fills a gap in the growing field of gender and security.

Provides empirical data for the academic community and a tool for evidence based policy work globally and regionally.

Of use to policy-makers, NGOs, development agencies, activists focusing on women's rights, peace and security, as well as to scholars in Africa, Europe and North America.

When United Nations Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security was adopted in October 2000, it was hailed by policy analysts and international observers alike as a path-breaking move. It was the first time that the security concerns of women in situations of armed conflict and their role in peace building were placed on the agenda of the UN Security Council.

In the field of international security there is a tendency to relegate discussions on women and children to the margins. This book addresses a broader debate on security and its governance in a variety of contexts while at the same time making the argument that human security cannot be achieved without placing women at the centre of this policy agenda – for perhaps the single most important measure of the effectiveness of security governance is its impact on women. But this is not just a book about women. Rather it is a book about inclusive human security for Africans, which cannot ignore the central place of women. Written by academics and activists from around Africa, this book's African-centred approach – both analytically and through derivative experiences – builds a corpus of approaches that will shape interventions, policy advocacy and programmatic approaches on women's rights and security sector governance.

'Funmi Olonisakin PhD is Director of the Conflict, Security and Development Group at King's College London. She has worked at the United Nations Office of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict. She is West African Regional Coordinator of the African Security Sector Network, a member of the International Advisory Board of the Geneva Centre for Democratic Control of Armed Forces, and of the Advisory Board of the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Training for Peace Programme. In 2010, she initiated the establishment of the African Leadership Centre which aims to build the next generation of African scholars generating cutting‑edge knowledge on peace, security and development.

Awino Okech is a feminist researcher who is currently a doctoral fellow and lecturer with the African Gender Institute at the University Cape Town. She previously managed ACORD's Pan African programmes on gender and conflict.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS


Preface
'Funmi Olonisakin & Awino Okech

Introduction
'Funmi Olonisakin & Awino Okech

Part 1 Conceptual approaches
1 Evolving narratives of security governance in Africa
'Funmi Olonisakin

2 Security sector reform: re-imagining its transformative potential
Comfort Ero

3 Alternative discourses: a feminist approach to re-thinking security
Awino Okech

Part 2 Country case studies
4 Security sector reform and the women's peace activism nexus in Liberia
Ecoma Alaga

5 Sierra Leone: opportunities, challenges and lessons learnt for women
Mohammed Sidi Bah

6 ‘Many truths were not revealed': the case of Mozambique
Helen Scanlon and Benilde Nhalevilo

Part 3 Regional organisations
7 The case of ECOWAS
Eka Ikpe

8 The African Union and security governance
Tim Murithi

Conclusion
Awino Okech