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  1. Feminist solutions for ending war
    Contributor: MacKenzie, Megan Hazel (Publisher); Wegner, Nicole (Publisher); Parashar, Swati
    Published: [2021]
    Publisher:  Pluto Press, London

    'War is a man's game,' or so goes the saying. Whether this is true or not, patriarchal capitalism is certainly one of the driving forces behind war in the modern era. So can we end war with feminism? This book argues that this is possible, and is in... more

     

    'War is a man's game,' or so goes the saying. Whether this is true or not, patriarchal capitalism is certainly one of the driving forces behind war in the modern era. So can we end war with feminism? This book argues that this is possible, and is in fact already happening. Each chapter provides a solution to war using innovative examples of how feminist and queer theory and practice inform pacifist treaties, movements and methods, from the international to the domestic spheres. The contributors propose a range of solutions that include arms abolition, centring Indigenous knowledge, economic restructuring, and transforming how we 'count' civilian deaths. Ending war requires challenging complex structures, but the solutions found in this edition have risen to this challenge. By thinking beyond the violence of the capitalist patriarchy, this book makes the powerful case that the possibility of life without war is real.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: MacKenzie, Megan Hazel (Publisher); Wegner, Nicole (Publisher); Parashar, Swati
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9780745342870; 9780745342863
    Subjects: Women and peace; Women and war; War (Philosophy); Masculinity; Frau; Feminismus; Geschlechterforschung; Kriegsende; Animosität; Beendigung; Ursache; Konflikt; Patriarchat; Masculinity; War (Philosophy); Women and peace; Women and war
    Scope: xvii, 248 Seiten, 22 cm
    Notes:

    References Seite: 229-230

    Megan MacKenzie and Nicole Wegner: Introduction to Feminist Solutions to Ending War

    Jessica Russ-Smith, Lecturer, Australian Catholic University, Australia: Giyira: Indigenous Women’s Knowing, Being and Doing as a Way to End War on Country

    Heidi Hudson, Professor of International Relations, University of the Free State, South Africa: One for All and All for One: Taking Collective Responsibility for Ending War and Sustaining Peace

    Sarai B. Aharoni, Lecturer, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel: Feminist Organising for Peace

    Shweta Singh, Assistant Professor, South Asian University, India & Diksha Poddar, Researcher, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India: Piecing-up Peace in Kashmir: Feminist Perspectives on Education for Peace

    Eda Gunyadin, Researcher, University of Sydney, Australia: Learn from Kurdish Women’s Liberation Movements to Imagine the Dissolution of the Nation-state System

    Cai Wilkinson, Associate Professor in International Relations, Deakin University, Australia: Queer Our Vision of Security

    Ray Acheson, Researcher at Program on Science and Global Security, Princeton University, USA: Abolish Nuclear Weapons: Draw on Feminist, Queer and Indigenous Theory and Experiences to Support Movements to End Nuclear Weapons

    Yolande Bouka, Assistant Professor, Queen’s University, Canada: Make Foreign Policies as if Black and Brown Lives Mattered

    Sertan Saral, PHD Candidate, University of Sydney, Australia: Draw on Ecofeminist and Indigenous Scholarship to Reimagine the Ways We Memorialise War

    Roxani Krystalli, Assistant Professor, University of St Andrews, Scotland: Engage with Combatants as Interlocutors for Peace, Not Only as Authorities on Violence

    Keina Yoshida, Research Officer in the Centre for Women, Peace, and Security, LSE, UK: Recognise the Rights of Nature

    Carol Cohn, Lecturer, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA & Claire Duncanson, Lecturer, University of Edinburgh, UK: Create Just, Inclusive Feminist Economies to Foster Sustainable Peace

    Thomas Gregory, Senior Lecturer, University of Auckland, New Zealand: Change How Civilian Casualties are ‘Counted’

    Laura J. Shepherd, Professor of International Relations, University of Sydney, Australia: Listen to Women When Creating Peace Initiatives

  2. Feminist solutions for ending war
    Contributor: MacKenzie, Megan Hazel (HerausgeberIn); Wegner, Nicole (HerausgeberIn); Parashar, Swati (VerfasserIn eines Vorworts)
    Published: 2021
    Publisher:  Pluto Press, London

    'War is a man's game,' or so goes the saying. Whether this is true or not, patriarchal capitalism is certainly one of the driving forces behind war in the modern era. So can we end war with feminism? This book argues that this is possible, and is in... more

    Auswärtiges Amt, Referat 116, Bibliothek, Informationsvermittlung
    Bs 503:59
    No inter-library loan
    Fachinformationsverbund Internationale Beziehungen und Länderkunde
    Unlimited inter-library loan, copies and loan
    Peace Research Institute Frankfurt, Bibliothek
    51.324
    Unlimited inter-library loan, copies and loan
    Arnold-Bergstraesser-Institut für kulturwissenschaftliche Forschung, Bibliothek
    Frei 119: Q-XI-E-0968
    No loan of volumes, only paper copies will be sent

     

    'War is a man's game,' or so goes the saying. Whether this is true or not, patriarchal capitalism is certainly one of the driving forces behind war in the modern era. So can we end war with feminism? This book argues that this is possible, and is in fact already happening. Each chapter provides a solution to war using innovative examples of how feminist and queer theory and practice inform pacifist treaties, movements and methods, from the international to the domestic spheres. The contributors propose a range of solutions that include arms abolition, centring Indigenous knowledge, economic restructuring, and transforming how we 'count' civilian deaths. Ending war requires challenging complex structures, but the solutions found in this edition have risen to this challenge. By thinking beyond the violence of the capitalist patriarchy, this book makes the powerful case that the possibility of life without war is real.

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
      BibTeX file
    Content information
    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: MacKenzie, Megan Hazel (HerausgeberIn); Wegner, Nicole (HerausgeberIn); Parashar, Swati (VerfasserIn eines Vorworts)
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9780745342870; 9780745342863
    Subjects: Women and peace; Women and war; War (Philosophy); Masculinity; Frau; Feminismus; Geschlechterforschung; Kriegsende; Animosität; Beendigung; Ursache; Konflikt; Patriarchat; Masculinity; War (Philosophy); Women and peace; Women and war
    Scope: xvii, 248 Seiten, 22 cm
    Notes:

    Literaturhinweise, Register

    Megan MacKenzie and Nicole Wegner: Introduction to Feminist Solutions to Ending War

    Jessica Russ-Smith, Lecturer, Australian Catholic University, Australia: Giyira: Indigenous Women’s Knowing, Being and Doing as a Way to End War on Country

    Heidi Hudson, Professor of International Relations, University of the Free State, South Africa: One for All and All for One: Taking Collective Responsibility for Ending War and Sustaining Peace

    Sarai B. Aharoni, Lecturer, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel: Feminist Organising for Peace

    Shweta Singh, Assistant Professor, South Asian University, India & Diksha Poddar, Researcher, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India: Piecing-up Peace in Kashmir: Feminist Perspectives on Education for Peace

    Eda Gunyadin, Researcher, University of Sydney, Australia: Learn from Kurdish Women’s Liberation Movements to Imagine the Dissolution of the Nation-state System

    Cai Wilkinson, Associate Professor in International Relations, Deakin University, Australia: Queer Our Vision of Security

    Ray Acheson, Researcher at Program on Science and Global Security, Princeton University, USA: Abolish Nuclear Weapons: Draw on Feminist, Queer and Indigenous Theory and Experiences to Support Movements to End Nuclear Weapons

    Yolande Bouka, Assistant Professor, Queen’s University, Canada: Make Foreign Policies as if Black and Brown Lives Mattered

    Sertan Saral, PHD Candidate, University of Sydney, Australia: Draw on Ecofeminist and Indigenous Scholarship to Reimagine the Ways We Memorialise War

    Roxani Krystalli, Assistant Professor, University of St Andrews, Scotland: Engage with Combatants as Interlocutors for Peace, Not Only as Authorities on Violence

    Keina Yoshida, Research Officer in the Centre for Women, Peace, and Security, LSE, UK: Recognise the Rights of Nature

    Carol Cohn, Lecturer, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA & Claire Duncanson, Lecturer, University of Edinburgh, UK: Create Just, Inclusive Feminist Economies to Foster Sustainable Peace

    Thomas Gregory, Senior Lecturer, University of Auckland, New Zealand: Change How Civilian Casualties are ‘Counted’

    Laura J. Shepherd, Professor of International Relations, University of Sydney, Australia: Listen to Women When Creating Peace Initiatives