Publication

Women and conflict transformation: influences, roles, and experiences

Jordan, Ann
Citations
Altmetric:
Titre
Publication date
2003-05-01
Document type
Journal article
Pages
14
Author(s)
Advisors
Other Contributors
Affiliation
ePub Date
Submitted date
Local subject classification
MeSH
Country
Collections
Description
At first glance it would appear that despite women's vital participation in peace-making processes, they are for the most part marginalised or belittled. However, moving away from the idea of women as outsiders and/or victims, we find evidence of their involvement in projects initiated and driven by them and/or in activities in which they work in equal roles alongside men. Many women in conflict areas are advocating and working effectively with approaches to lasting positive peace that transcend traditional male-dominated structures and ideologies. Large numbers of ordinary women, men, and children are working mostly behind the scenes to achieve justice and equality. Women are very much involved but get far less recognition than men. The scale and diversity of largely unacknowledged but effective grassroots peace efforts worldwide, particularly among women, requires much greater recognition by the international community. This article is based on a research project that uses an oral testimony approach and a multicultural perspective to give voice to women working in the field in a wide range of transformational processes.
Language
English
Other Titles
Abstract
Citation
Journal
Development in Practice
Journal Theme
Development, Women and War: Feminist perspectives
Volume
13
Issue
2 & 3
Research Unit
Table of contents
Series
ISSN
0961-4524
EISSN
1364-9213
ISBN
ISMN
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Gov't Doc #
Embedded videos
Test Link
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue