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Co-Optation of Feminism: Gender, Militarism and the UNSC Resolution 1325
2017
Feminist Critique: East European Journal of Feminist and Queer Studies
United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 is often referred to as a landmark resolution. Despite its revolutionary potential, I argue that the Resolution was developed through gendered discourses that allowed its use for militarist purposes. Informed by poststructuralist international relations feminist theory, I refer to the Resolution as a discursive practice and claim that the ways in which the UN conceptual apparatus understands and interprets gender and security open up possibilities
doi:10.52323/fc1-1
fatcat:bcuukblwmbh2xanfljfqqnkmtu