feminist and gender apchs to security 29 oct 13 final

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    Feminism and Gender

    Approaches to Security

    Sanaullah Khan

    29 October 2013

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    Chapter 2 ofCritical Security Studies: An Introduction by

    Columba Peoples and Nick Vaughan-Williams

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    Salient terms and concepts

    Introduction of the chapter

    Arguments propagated in the chapter

    Thoughts of renowned feminists referred in the chapter

    Poststructural approaches to security

    Criticism on poststructural approaches to security

    Analysis

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    Sex: For most feminists, sex highlights biological

    determination of human, and therefore is an ineradicable

    difference between female and male.

    Gender: Sex and gender are often used interchangeably

    in everyday language. Gender refers to the social

    construction of sexual difference. As such, gender is

    clearly distinct from sex. Gender denotes a set of

    culturally defined distinctions between women and men.

    Gender either operates through stereotyping, or it is a

    manifestation of structural power relations.

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    Patriarchy: Patriarchy literally means rule by the father.

    Feminists use patriarchy in this specific and limited sense,

    to describe the structure of the family and the dominance

    of the husband-father over both his wife and his children.Patriarchy thus means rule by men.

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    Femininity: Characteristics to identify female(emotionality, caring, dependence).

    Masculinity: Characteristics to identify male (strength,

    aggression, autonomy).

    Performativity: The idea that gendered identities are not

    neutral, but produced through being acted out in social

    life.

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    Feminism: Feminism can broadly be defined as a

    movement for the social advancement of women.

    Feminist theory is based on two central beliefs: that

    women are disadvantaged because of their sex; and that

    this disadvantage can and should be overthrown.

    Liberal Feminism: A form of feminism that is grounded in

    the belief that sexual differences are irrelevant to personal

    worth and calls for equal rights for women and men in the

    public realm.

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    Focus of liberal feminism is invisibility of women in

    security. Exponent of this theory is Synthia Enloe.

    Radical Feminism: A form of feminism that holds gender

    divisions to be the most politically significant of social

    cleavages, and believes that these are rooted in the

    structures of family or domestic life.

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    Stand Point Feminism: A form of feminism that focuses

    on the experiences of women in global politics for

    theorizing global security relations. This approach stresses

    that the views and experiences of women be taken in

    theorising global security relations. J. Ann Tickner is the

    exponent of this theory.

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    Radical Feminism: A form of feminism that holds gender

    divisions to be the most politically significant of social

    cleavages, and believes that these are rooted in the

    structures of family or domestic life.

    Essentialism: The belief that biological factors are crucial

    in determining psychological and behavioural traits.

    Poststructural Gender Approach: This approach does

    not give any special ontological status to woman. Instead it

    contends that woman (as sex) is a discursive construct.

    V. Spike Peterson is the exponent of this theory.

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    Poststructuralists argue that there is no objective

    yardstick that we can use to define threats, dangers,

    enemies, or, underdevelopment etc.

    We need to investigate how constructions of the world

    and those people and place that inhabit it, make

    particular policies seem natural and therefore legitimate.

    Poststructuralists raise questions about ontology (theory

    of existence) and epistemology (theory of knowledge).

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    Historically most of the state leaders, diplomats, soldiers

    and international civil servants have been men.

    Men make wars because wars make them men

    (Barbra Enenriech)

    International politics and security are mans world.

    Feminists contend that realist-oriented security studies

    have disregarded womenstudy of men by the men.

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    Pythagoras (570 to c. 495 BC) wrote, "There is a good

    principle that created order, light and man and a bad

    principle that created chaos, darkness and woman.

    Aristotle (384 to 322 BC) Women are inferior in reasoning.

    Menander (c. 341 to 290) Woman is a pain that never goes

    away.

    Paul the Apostle, (c. 5 to c. 67 AD) "Of all the wild animals,

    none can be found as harmful as women.

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    Gender inequalities (employment, wages, type of work).

    Women form only one third of the work force.

    Womens earning has been 50 to 80% of the mens.

    Of 1.3 billion people living in poverty, 70% are women.

    Women are assigned to positions that have less or no

    authority.

    Resource scarcity affects women more than men; women

    spend most of their time in collecting water.

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    Women have less education opportunities; two third of

    worlds female are illiterate.

    Women more vulnerable to sexual violence especially during

    conflict situations, displacement, and in refugee camps.

    Women represented far less in government; developing

    countries are comparatively better as 1st female prime

    minister was in Sri Lanka in 1960 whereas in West British

    female prime minister was in 1979.

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    Discipline of security has been gender-blind.

    Women remained invisible in high politics i.e. security,

    military, war for a variety of reasons.

    One of the reasons is that traditional perspectives were

    state centric which disregarded gender.

    Secondly, the state, institutions, processes and world

    politics have been patriarchal in character.

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    Almost all decision making institutions have been

    dominated by man. Even if there is a woman member

    in such institutions, her voice is not heard well.

    The concept of liberal feminism is that women be given

    equal rights in all walks of life.

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    French feminist Simone de Beauvoir (190886), Women

    are made, they are not born.

    The idea that gender is a social construct was originally

    conceived as a means of refuting biological determinism,the notion, favoured by many anti-feminists, that biology

    is destiny, implying that womens domestic or private

    role is an inevitable consequence of their physical and

    biological make-up.

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    French feminist and political activist.

    Her feminist work is a voluminous

    book The Second Sex (1949)

    She posits that man and woman are

    socially constructed. Historically

    women have been portrayed inferior,

    so as to subordinate them.

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    In 1989, US Academic Synthia

    Enloe published Bananas,

    Beaches and Bases: Making

    Feminist Sense of International

    Politics.

    She contends that men are

    dominant to an extent that world

    politics is peopled by men.

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    By mid 1980s there were 3000 foreign powers military

    bases across the world.

    She is of the view that unpaid work of military persons

    wives was unnoticed.

    In these bases, the sons adopt military career but

    daughters emulating their mothers become housewives.

    She also says that behind each male working on bananaplantation there is unpaid women working at home.

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    Masculine traits: strength, power

    and autonomy.

    She contends that ideals of

    manhood and state are mutually

    reinforcing to exclude women from

    high politics (security, military, war)

    Heroic characteristics i.e.

    chauvinism and patriotism are

    attributed to men and women are

    systematically kept deprived.

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    Peterson argues that feminists actual job

    is to transform ontology (theory of beings)

    and epistemology (theory of knowing) to

    make these gender neutral because

    masculine or feminine traits are socially

    constructed.

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    Argues that sex and gender are misnomer.

    Shares thoughts of Michel Foucault who

    said that sex is bodily effect of gendered

    regimes of power/knowledge in society.

    Posits that sex/gender is not permanent but

    performativity is used to identify it.

    She gives example of the behaviour andlooks ofdrag queens which displays their

    sex/gender.

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    Post structuralism has raised questions on liberal feminisms

    efforts to merely make woman more visible in the security.

    Post structural gender theorists contend that categorization

    of humankind into male and female is radically unstable.

    There are diverse debates and arguments in feminist and

    gender approaches to security.

    The authors say that various debates on gender have

    opened important areas of research in Critical Security

    Studies relating to issue involving identity, violence and

    justice.

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    There are challenges of poststructuralist feminist and

    gender approaches to the study of security.

    Discriminatory patriarchal structures of the society were

    considered to be major reason for feminist movements

    but poststructuralism eliminates patriarchy.

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    The writers have adopted very difficult method to explain

    the point of view.

    Long winded sentences impede assimilation of the

    context and reach to the core issue intended to be

    explained.

    Poststructuralism appears to refute biological

    determination of sex.

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    Earlier definitions of sex and gender and difference

    thereof is easy to understand but saying that sex/gender

    is not static and instable is incomprehensible. Confusing

    the matter by drawing analogy with drag queens also

    appears to be untenable.

    Feminist perspectives presented in this chapter are euro-

    centric. Gleaning through the chapter indicates that most

    feminists have raised the issue of unpaid household

    work. Monetization of services rendered by the women in

    their homes is considered unnecessary.

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