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Related: About this forumSecuring Peace on Earth
Securing Peace on Earth
In a move that elevates womens role in the prevention and resolution of conflict globally, Clare Hutchinson has been appointed as NATOs Special Representative for women, peace and security.
Creative Commons / UN Women
As Special Representative, Hutchinsona Canadian gender advocate whose breadth of experience includes over ten years as a Gender Adviser for the United Nationsis now the key choreographer of NATOs work on its women, peace and security agenda. Hutchinson has been referred to as a champion of womens rights and empowerment, and her appointment speaks to Canadas efforts to bring a feminist lens to peacekeeping. In a similar vein, Canada has just launched its second National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security, as well as its Elsie Initiative on Women in Peace Operations. The Elsie Initiative, named after the Canadian womens rights trailblazer Elsie MacGill, is aimed to help Canada meet the benchmarks set by 2015 U.N. Resolution 2242, which includes doubling the rate of womens participation as peacekeepers by 2020. To meet this target, the Elsie Initiative initiates efforts to develop a systematic approach to increase the deployment of women in peace operations and design tailored technical assistance for countries looking to support their deployed women peacekeepers. Canada will also provide six million dollars in assistance to designated U.N. peacekeeping missions to support womens increased participation and $15 million to establish a global fund to support further deployment of women peacekeepers.
Canadas self-defined feminist foreign policy is part of a larger, multinational movement to prioritize gender as a cross-cutting, fundamental component of conflict resolution and prevention. Countries across the globe are taking real steps that ensure womens meaningful participation and leadership in preventing and resolving conflict. In the United States this past October, the Women, Peace and Security Act was signed into law, codifying into U.S. foreign policy womens inclusion as a core, operationalized priority. Similarly, dozens of countries, including Liberia, Bangladesh, Rwanda, Argentina, Afghanistan and South Africa, have launched programs that have increasedin some cases doubling and even triplingwomens involvement in peacekeeping operations. For instance, in Rwanda, where a constitutional amendment requires gender equality as a legal framework, women played a pivotal role in facilitating the post-1994 genocide reconstruction process and now make up more than 50 percent of the countrys national parliament.
The research showing that womens involvement is fundamental to the creation of strong, more sustainable solutions to bringing an end to wars, combating terrorism and improving human rights around the world is overwhelming. Peace is possible only when women have a seat at the negotiating tables. This is due in part to the fact that women have a very different perspective about what causes conflict, what comes from conflict, and how to resolve it, Special Representative Hutchinson explains. When conflict breaks out and men join the armed forces, women are left on the ground, working to keep society and their communities going. If you dont include their voices and experiences, then youre not getting a genuine picture about how to address the conflict. Laws and initiatives like the ones coming out of the U.S. and Canada recognize the urgency of broadening the involvement of women in order to safeguard peace and build lasting security.
It has been an exciting year for women, peace and security across the globe, as womentheir voices and experiencesare finally being elevated across the full spectrum of foreign policy. Yet rising extremism and international crises continue to threaten global security. Now more than ever is the time for policy makers to follow the lead of countries that are advancing gender equality and womens empowerment around the world.
http://msmagazine.com/blog/2017/11/27/securing-peace-earth/