Gender and Security Sector Reform: Gendering Differently?
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Download: Gender and Security Sector Reform Gendering Differently.pdf (371.91 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: Final published version
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State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: Not specified
Serval ID
serval:BIB_F9FEE783A7C5
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Gender and Security Sector Reform: Gendering Differently?
Journal
International Peacekeeping
ISSN-L
1353-3312
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2014
Volume
21
Number
5
Pages
604-622
Language
english
Abstract
Recent efforts to implement gender mainstreaming in the field of security sector reform have resulted in an international policy discourse on gender and security sector reform (GSSR). Critics have challenged GSSR for its focus on 'adding women' and its failure to be transformative. This article contests this assessment, demonstrating that GSSR is not only about 'adding women', but also, importantly, about 'gendering men differently' and has important albeit problematic transformative implications. Drawing on poststructuralist and postcolonial feminist theory, I propose a critical reading of GSSR policy discourse in order to analyse its built-in logics, tensions and implications. I argue that this discourse establishes a powerful 'grid of intelligibility' that draws on gendered and racialized dualisms to normalize certain forms of subjectivity while rendering invisible and marginalizing others, and contributing to reproduce certain forms of normativity and hierarchy. Revealing such processes of discursive in/exclusion and marginalized subjectivities can serve as a starting point to challenge and transform GSSR practice and identify sites of contestation.
Create date
25/11/2014 13:04
Last modification date
13/05/2023 6:17