Ebook: Gender and Citizenship
Author: Maria-Adriana Deiana
- Tags: Political Science and International Relations, Conflict Studies, Politics and Gender, Peace Studies, Citizenship, International Security Studies, Development and Gender
- Series: Rethinking Peace and Conflict Studies
- Year: 2018
- Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK
- Edition: 1st ed.
- Language: English
- pdf
This book examines the remaking of women’s citizenship in the aftermath of conflict and international intervention. It develops a feminist critique of consociationalism as the dominant model of post-conflict governance by tracking the gendered implications of the Dayton Peace Agreement. It illustrates how the legitimisation of ethnonationalist power enabled by the agreement has reduced citizenship to an all-encompassing logic of ethnonational belonging and implicitly reproduced its attendant patriarchal gender order. Foregrounding women’s diverse experiences, the book reveals gendered ramifications produced at the intersection of conflict, ethno-nationalism and international peacebuilding. Deploying a multidimensional feminist approach centred around women’s narratives of belonging, exclusion, and agency, this book offers a critical interrogation of the promises of peace and explores individual/collective efforts to re-imagine citizenship.