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ID151527
Title ProperGender mainstreaming gap
Other Title Informationsecurity council resolution 1325 and UN peacekeeping mandates
LanguageENG
AuthorKreft, Anne-Kathrin
Summary / Abstract (Note)In response to women’s frequent marginalization in conflict settings, the United Nations Security Council passed resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security in 2000. It called for including a gender perspective into peacekeeping operations and for enhancing women’s participation in all aspects of post-conflict reconstruction. This article contributes to the empirical literature on the implementation of UNSCR 1325, examining the extent of gender mainstreaming in UN peacekeeping mandates. Situated in a theoretical framework of gradual norm cascades, it hypothesizes that UNSCR 1325 has increased gender content in mandates, but selectively so. Statistical analyses of an original dataset covering all 71 UN peacekeeping operations from 1948 until 2014 reveal that gender-mainstreamed mandates are more likely in conflicts with high levels of sexual violence. In designing gendered peacekeeping mandates, actors thus appear to be responsive to cues about the salience of a very visible, albeit narrow, gender issue emanating from the respective conflict rather than being guided by the universalist norms of women’s participation entrenched in UNSCR 1325.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Peacekeeping Vol. 24, No.1; Feb 2017: p.132-158
Journal SourceInternational Peacekeeping Vol: 24 No 1
Key WordsUnited Nations Security Council ;  Security Council Resolution ;  Gender Mainstreaming Gap ;  1325 ;  UN Peacekeeping Mandates


 
 
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