Introduction
Key Threads and Themes
Gender Centrality
Relevant International Norms
Part I - Conflict and its Dynamics
Chapter 1 - Before, During and After Conflict - The Connections for
Women
Mapping the Status of Women Prior to Conflict
Some Relevant Measures
Gender, Law, and Social Capital
A Practical Assessment of the Before and After
Chapter 2 - Gender and the Forms and Experiences of Conflict
Women as Political and Military Actors
Violence, Women, and Victimization
Masculinities and Conflict
Part II - Towards Peace
Chapter 3 - The Significance of Security: Realizing Peace
Is Gender Central to Security?
Security Reform and Transition
Critique of Mainstream Approaches to the Concept of Post-Conflict
Security
So Where is Gender in Security Reform?
Security Reform, Transition, and Transnational Interests
A New Paradigm of Gendered Security
Chapter 4 - Engendering International Intervention
International Interventions
The Actors
Towards Gender Positive Intervention
Capturing and Retaining Gender Equity Achieved During War
Chapter 5 - Peacekeeping
Parameters and Status of Peacekeeping Missions
Masculinities of Peacekeeping
Positive and Negative Lessons Learned from Peacekeeping
Missions
Positives and Negatives of Employment and Economic Stimulus
Sexual Violence and Peacekeeping Missions
What Would Gender-Positive Peacekeeping Address?
Legal Accountability
Codes of Conduct
Added Gender Roles in Peacekeeping
Chapter 6 - Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Programs
(DDR)
DDR Programs: What Happens?
The Power of Gender and DDR
Deconstructing DDR Programs
Reconstructing DDR Programs
Attention to Masculinities
The Ways Forward
Chapter 7 - International and Local Criminal Accountability for
Gendered Violence
Sex-Based Violence and Accountability in International Law
The Legal Journey to Codify Gendered Crimes in Armed Conflicts
Evidentiary Rules and Sexual Violence
Other Accountability Mechanisms - Restorative Justice and Other
Practices
Chapter 8 - Remedies
Truth Processes
The Gendered Dimensions of Truth Recovery
How Can Truth Recovery Mechanisms Centralize Gender?
Reparations
Lustration, Vetting, and Gender
Chapter 9 - Law Reform, Constitutional Design, and Gender
Gender and the Rule of Law in Post-Conflict Societies
Constitutional Transformation and Post-Conflict Processes
Process: Peace Agreements as Constitutional Documents
Constitutional Gender Centrality - Substance and Export
Reproductive Rights
Part III - Reconstruction and Development
Chapter 10 - Gender and Governance
Post Conflict Governance
Institution Building
Governance Conflated with Economic Reconstruction and
Democratization
Gendering Governance
Chapter 11 - Development Infrastructure: Economics, Health and
Education
The Differing Directions of Post-conflict and Development
Fields
Gender Centrality in Development
Social Services Justice as the Integration of Post Conflict
Processes and Development
Long-term Development
Fionnuala Ní Aoláin concurrently holds the Dorsey & Whitney Chair
in Law at the University of Minnesota Law School and a Chair in Law
at the Transitional Justice Institute (Belfast). She was a
Fulbright Scholar at Harvard Law School, and Associate-in-Law at
Columbia Law School, Associate Professor of Law at the Hebrew
University and co-founder of the Transitional Justice Institute at
the University of Ulster. Ní
Aoláin has been active in human rights and women's rights issues in
Ireland and internationally throughout her academic career.
Dina Francesca Haynes is Professor of Law at New England Law |
Boston. She has previously taught at Georgetown Law Center,
American University's Washington College of Law and the University
of Nevada-Las Vegas. Prior to teaching, Haynes was a practicing
international human rights lawyer in a variety of positions and has
worked on human rights, human trafficking, gender, and post
conflict reconstruction issues in Chad, Botswana, South Africa,
Rwanda, Croatia, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Serbia, Macedonia and Romania.
Naomi Cahn is the John Theodore Fey Research Professor of Law at
George Washington University Law School. She has written numerous
law review articles and several books in the areas of family law,
international law, and feminism. Professor Cahn is co-chair of the
Women in International Law Interest Group of the American Society
of International Law, and a member of the Yale Cultural Cognition
Project.
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