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Governing the Feminist Peace

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This book offers a groundbreaking critical account of the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) agenda, exploring its evolution in relation to the wider politics of global governance and feminism.
  • 02 April 2024
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Winner, 2025 Carole Pateman Gender and Politics Book Prize, Australian Political Studies Association

Honorable Mention, 2025 Yale Ferguson Award, International Studies Association - Northeast

Winner, 2024 Choice Outstanding Academic Title

The Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) agenda is celebrated as a landmark global framework for achieving gender equality in peace and security governance. Its power is visible in two decades of United Nations resolutions, national action plans, regional initiatives, and countless activist, academic, and philanthropic projects. Yet despite this vitality, it is haunted by failure, as a lack of political will and stubborn patriarchal resistance frustrate its promise.

This book offers a groundbreaking critical account of the WPS agenda, exploring its evolution in relation to the wider politics of global governance and feminism. Paul Kirby and Laura J. Shepherd argue that WPS is not a settled, cohesive policy but a field in flux, defined and disrupted by a growing number of national, supranational, subnational, and transnational agents who in turn act on an expanding catalogue of threats, from climate change to homophobia, challenging traditional boundaries of peace and security. Kirby and Shepherd reconceptualize WPS as a “policy ecosystem,” tracing interaction and contestation around the agenda across levels from the UN Security Council to military alliances to feminist activists. They combine analysis of a vast dataset of policy documents with key informant interviews and close readings of diplomacy, statecraft, the politics of indigeneity, counterinsurgency, antimilitarism, human rights, and the arms trade across the first twenty years of WPS. Far-reaching and incisive, Governing the Feminist Peace poses a provocative question: What if we abandoned the idea of the WPS agenda as a unified political project altogether?

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Price: $40.00
Pages: 408
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Columbia Studies in International Order and Politics
Publication Date: 02 April 2024
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231205139
Format: Paperback
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Women in Politics, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Security (National & International), POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General
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This magnificent collaboration exceeds all expectations. Engaging with the Women, Peace, and Security agenda as a dynamic plurality, Shepherd and Kirby map the complexities, tensions, and contestations of its vast ecosystem of policies and ‘messy realities.’ Their method produces compelling insights into what conditions (and failures) might empower feminist vitality (postcolonial, antiracist, indigenous, and queer) to foster feminist peace.

Paul Kirby is senior lecturer in the School of Politics and International Relations at Queen Mary University of London and a codirector of the UKRI GCRF Gender, Justice and Security Hub.

Laura J. Shepherd is professor of international relations at the University of Sydney and a visiting senior fellow at the LSE Centre for Women, Peace and Security.

List of Tables and Figures
A Note on Referencing
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
1. The Impossibility of Women, Peace, and Security
2. Becoming Policy Ecologists
3. Map, Territory, Text
4. Producing an Agenda at the United Nations
5. Domesticating the Gender Perspective
6. Fractures and Frictions of a Policy Ecosystem
7. Borderlands of the Feminist Peace
8. Forget WPS
Appendix 1. Ecosystem Policy Documents
Appendix 2. Policy Ecosystem Selection Criteria
Appendix 3. Codebook for Policy Ecosystem Analysis
Appendix 4. United Nations Treaties, Conventions, and Resolutions
Notes
Bibliography
Index