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Despite international laws and policies mandating women’s participation in security sector reform (SSR), women’s perspectives are often discounted or overlooked. Women in civil society can also find themselves outside of discussions about security and unsure how to engage in them.

To address this gap, The Institute for Inclusive Security and The Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces (DCAF) are launching an innovative guide for women in civil society that provides concrete steps on how to help develop an effective and accountable security sector.

Why the Guide is Unique

The Women’s Guide to Security Sector Reform responds to a critical need. “Advocating for women’s roles in SSR is important because conflict is a culture … we cannot combat it with more conflict,” says Alaa Murabit, founder, Voice of Libyan Women, and reviewer of the Women’s Guide. “We can combat it with women who drive a different security understanding.”

The Women’s Guide is written mainly for women who have not formally studied security or worked with police, militaries, elected officials, and other actors within the sector. Women often have essential knowledge of community needs and a strong desire to make the security sector serve communities better. The Women’s Guide draws on varied experiences of women in civil society from across the world and shares examples of practical, innovative projects. Leading female activists from Afghanistan, Liberia, Libya, Nepal, Serbia, and Uganda provided invaluable feedback.

What the Guide Includes

In addition to introducing key concepts, the Women’s Guide outlines concrete ways for women and women’s organizations to influence reform from the grassroots. Included are specific steps on how to research security issues, form coalitions, plan strategically, develop recommendations, advocate (with ideas of how to target messages to specific audiences), and engage directly (such as through local forums or by providing training).

The Women’s Guide contains practical tools for women to take action. For example:

  • Activities to identify local risks to stability
  • Sample letters to officials asking for meetings
  • Talking points for meetings with policymakers

It also includes definitions of jargon, a key to the roles of major security actors, and ideas for how to counter skeptics who oppose women in civil society being part of SSR.

In addition to English, the Women’s Guide will be available in Arabic, French, and Bosnian. More translations will be done if funds become available.

How Women are Taking Action

Already, women around the globe are planning to use the Women’s Guide as a platform for engaging with the security sector. For example, with DCAF and local partner support, Žene Ženama, a women’s organization in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) will host four one-day launch workshops across BiH this May. With the Women’s Guide as a roadmap, civil society and local government actors will come together to discuss the status of gender and SSR and identify avenues for collaboration.

Launches of the Women’s Guide are also planned for later this year in West Africa, Washington, DC, Afghanistan, and the Middle East.

Click here to download the Women’s Guide to Security Sector Reform

Tobie Whitman, PhD, is senior adviser at The Institute for Inclusive Security, where she leads the organization’s research program. Previously she worked with USAID and Women for Women International.

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Today is Hillary Clinton’s last day as Secretary of State. It’s a moment to take stock—not simply of her many accomplishments during these past four years, but also of the lasting impact of her exceptional leadership.

The airwaves this week have been dominated by pundits speculating on her legacy. But few have spotlighted Clinton’s unique contribution: the elevation of women as a powerful force for a more stable world. Like (General, then) Secretary of State George Marshall before her, she’s championed a bold new security paradigm; one that, like his, will “bear fruit in seasons to come.”

This is the case I made on UP with Chris Hayes on MSNBC this past Sunday morning, and that I’ve expanded in a piece for The Huffington Post. Hillary Clinton has ensured a systemic shift in the US government (and pushed many abroad) toward what I call “inclusive security.”

Watch the video from Up with Chris Hayes:

Legacies are unpredictable. And certainly, with Hillary barely beginning her much-deserved R&R and newly-confirmed successor John Kerry not yet unpacked, it’s impossible to know what future historians will say about either of them. But earlier this week, President Obama signed a memorandum making permanent the position of Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women’s Issues that Secretary Clinton created (and Melanne Verveer so capably filled).

Coincidence? No. Her work carries on… and will.

Read my Huffington Post piece. I welcome your thoughts.

“Marshall and Clinton: A Shared Legacy”

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Rachel Maddow and Hillary Clinton
This image is from “Texts from Hillary,” an internet meme inspired by Sec. Clinton that went viral online. Clinton, whose favorite post showed her texting with Ryan Gosling, even joined in on the fun by contributing her own creation to the tumblr blog.

This past year, Inclusive Security was part of promising change that got more women to more decision-making tables.

We’re proud that our work is part of an even bigger splash women made in 2012. Preventing and ending war requires not just policy shifts but also widespread changes in the way people think about women in politics, business, governance, and beyond.

Here are my must-read articles from 2012:

  • Valerie Hudson’s groundbreaking research in Sex and World Peace revealed the best predictor of a state’s security. Hint: It isn’t wealth or democracy.
  • Christina Huffington compiled this list of the 24 best moments for women in 2012. At #9: More positions are formally opened up to female service members.
  • Anne-Marie Slaughter’s manifesto (#12 on Huffington’s list) on why women can’t have it all sparked debate about work-life balance that dominated the internet and news media for weeks over the summer. Don’t miss Slaughter’s follow-up on “Why Family is a Foreign-Policy Issue.”
  • Olivia B. Waxman highlighted four ways women won the 2012 US election. Our favorite? The record-breaking number of incoming female senators (20).
  • Inclusive Security’s founder and chair, Ambassador Swanee Hunt, laid out why we should care about getting more women elected on both sides of the aisle. It will lower corruption, broaden the agenda, and encourage bipartisan collaboration.
  • Ambassador Melanne Verveer also made the case for how promoting the status of women makes for smarter foreign policy. We couldn’t agree more.
  • The Global Network of Women Peacebuilders published its annual “Women Count” report  [PDF], which monitors worldwide progress on implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 and offers recommendations for improving results.
  • Jamie Bechtel echoes Wangari Maathai’s stirring call for the women of Kenya to plant trees and how women, war, and natural resources are vitally connected.

Inclusive Security had a banner year, too: we launched a new website and a multi-million dollar initiative called Resolution To Act, designed to support countries developing and implementing National Action Plans.

We expanded our work in the Middle East, North Africa, and beyond. Here in the US, we moved into a beautiful new office to accommodate our growing staff.

Our next steps promise to be even more exciting. We’re ready to make 2013 the best year yet: more women at the table, more meaningful policies to ensure everyone has a say in decisions that affect their lives, more peace and security in communities throughout the world. We hope you’ll join us.

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From GlobalPost:

In front of a packed house at Harvard’s Institute of Politics last night, six women from divergent regions, cultures and backgrounds came together to share stories of how women are working to secure conflict zones and push for peaceful solutions to some of the most complicated issues in the world.

From Syria to Colombia to Myanmar, these women, moderated by former ambassador Swanee Hunt, told the stories of their unique approach to ending wars and dictatorships and tackling politics in traditionally patriarchal countries.

Read more at GlobalPost.

Watch the video:

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"Congratulations to N-Peace Award Winners" with photos of the three women winners

Farkhunda Zahra Naderi and Quhramaana Kakar of Afghanistan and Radha Paudel of Nepal were all recognized as Role Models for Peace by 55,000 people who voted online to show their support for female peacebuilders across the globe. Each woman received the award, given out by the N-Peace Network, because of her extensive experience in the fields of conflict resolution and peacebuilding.

The UN Development Programme initiated the N-Peace Network in partnership with Search for Common Ground, The Institute for Inclusive Security, and with support from the Australian Government Overseas Aid Program (Australian AID).

Farkhunda Zahra Naderi

In 2010, Farkhunda Zahra Naderi took office in Afghanistan as the Kabul representative in the National Assembly. Since her election, Farkhunda has continued to work on increasing the participation of women in the Supreme Court, to produce laws eliminating violence against women, and to advocate for the increased participation of women in the High Peace Council.

Farkhunda was involved in the June 2011 Inclusive Security delegation to Washington, DC, along with N-Peace nominees Hasina Safi and Wazhma Frogh. Learn more about that delegation here.

Quhramaana Kakar

Quhramaana Kakar is a leading figure engaging women and youth who are rebuilding and creating peace in the most insecure parts of Afghanistan. She was the gender adviser for the Afghanistan Peace and Reconciliation Program. In that position, she developed gender-responsive policies and obtained formal seats for women in the provincial peace councils.

Quhramanna will soon begin studying the role of women peacebuilding in Afghanistan for her PhD from Cambridge University.

Radha Paudel

Radha Paudel has 17 years of experience building peace, supporting civil society, and advocating for the rights of women, the poor, rural populations, and minorities in Nepal. She is the founder and president of Action Works Nepal, an organization that works with the most vulnerable communities in the most conflict-affected regions in the country.

Radha also coordinated the ‘Women’s Campaign for Peace and Constitution,’ which formulated a gender-responsive constitution and peacebuilding process in Nepal.

We congratulate all 3 women and all 13 nominees from our Women Waging Peace Network! A special thank you to everyone who participated in voting!

Pari Farmani is the development and network coordinator at The Institute for Inclusive Security. She works to maintain a sense of community among Women Waging Peace Network members. She also connects them to resources to assist them in resolving conflict and building peace in their home countries.

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Two women participating in an event on a stage

Lt. General (Ret.) Orit Adato speaks at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum in January 2008. A member of the Women in Security and Policy Forum, General Adato has recently been advocating to maintain women’s access to leadership positions in the Israeli Defense Forces.

Anyone who follows Israeli politics has seen a roller coaster summer. Centrist party Kadima joined Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud-led coalition government two months ago; they have since dropped out.

The political issue that led to the coalition’s breakup has been disagreement on how to incorporate religious students, long permitted an exemption to study religious texts, into the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF). While many women agree that the widespread exemption needs to end, they’re also concerned that incorporation of religious soldiers will adversely affect women’s leadership.

Women in Israel face few formal barriers to their participation, but the informal decisions made by low-level commanders can impede their ability to advance. Many ultra-orthodox soldiers won’t serve with women due to their religious views, and there is a lot of pressure from the ultra-orthodox community to ensure the separation of men and women within the military.

The IDF must set clear, specific standards to ensure that women retain their right to serve and to give them opportunities for advancement. Unless they do so, commanders may bend to pressure from religious organizations to remove women from posts. In recent months, observant male soldiers have walked out of ceremonies with female singers, and four female soldiers were removed from their artillery battalion when it was announced that religious soldiers would join.

As the government has debated models for recruitment, the Israeli Women in Security and Policy Forum, a coalition affiliated with Inclusive Security, testified in front of a Knesset committee to share their recommendations on how to incorporate religious soldiers while, at the same time, retaining opportunities for women’s advancement.

Keep in mind, in Israel, high-level military service isn’t about only about a career in defense. Often, individuals are expected to have a security background in order to be influential in the political or business spheres as well, so excluding women from military leadership affects their representation across every element of society.

Since Israel has compulsory military service, both men and women must follow up their high school education with several years in the IDF. However, this required service for both sexes rarely leads to equal representation in the top military leadership.

Forum members have recently advocated for women to maintain and increase their influence in the IDF. Forum members have argued that, with women involved, decisions about war and peace would take into account the long-term perspectives often missed by men. They see the potential for more robust consideration of the changing nature of warfare, its effect on civilians, and how to build a culture of peace.

Dr. Ofra Gracier, a senior research fellow at The Institute for Intelligence Research in the Israeli Defense Forces, has done military training for both the IDF and for US forces. She was also one of three Forum members to testify before the Knesset committee on May 31. Among other things, the Forum members called for a new model of service “that sets one standard for all soldiers and is based on merit, not gender” and a quota that ensures women are included in high-ranking positions.

Dr. Gracier followed up with a blog post that shared more of the group’s perspectives and recommendations. Her overall point is that women are often the casualties of competing religious and military goals. She and others are working to ensure that doesn’t happen this time.

Rebecca Miller is a senior program officer at The Institute for Inclusive Security where she leads Inclusive Security’s work to support women leaders’ participation in peace processes throughout the Middle East and North Africa. She also strengthens Inclusive Security’s partnerships with like-minded organizations and mainstreams gender in the peacebuilding community.

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Rep. Carnahan stands with two Libyan Women

Rep. Russ Carnahan (left), a leading member of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Women, Peace, and Security Act’s primary champion, poses for a photo with Women Waging Peace Network members Alaa Murabit (center) and Amina Megheirbi (right) after discussing the political transition process in Libya. (Inclusive Security archives)

Yesterday, Reps. Russ Carnahan (D-MO) and Howard Berman (D-CA), as well as Sens. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX), introduced the bicameral, bipartisan Women, Peace, and Security Act of 2012 (H.R. 6255 / S. 3477). According to its champions, the act would increase the role of women in conflict prevention and resolution and advance the implementation of the US National Action Plan on Women, Peace, and Security launched by President Obama’s executive order in December 2011.

“For too long, women have been left out of peace negotiations—even though they are disproportionately affected by these conflicts,” Sen. Boxer said in a statement released by her office. “From Northern Ireland to Liberia, women have proven how valuable their contributions are to peace talks, conflict prevention and conflict mediation, so it is critical that we ensure that women are at the table.”

According to Hunt Alternatives, LLC* [PDF], the legislation would:

  • Encourage the US to work with international partners and eliminate barriers to women’s participation in high-stakes peace and security processes.
  • Mandate training for US defense, diplomatic, and development personnel on the value of women’s inclusion and strategies for achieving it.
  • Require the secretary of state to provide an annual report to Congress that evaluates US diplomatic and foreign assistance vis-à-vis women’s participation.

Thirty-six US civil society organizations—including Amnesty International USA, Vital Voices, and Women Thrive Worldwide—issued a statement [PDF] applauding the introduction of the WPS Act. In the legislation, the bill’s cosponsors cited civil society’s “invaluable contributions” and called on the Obama administration to consult with them to ensure the US NAP’s effective implementation.

Original Cosponsors

Sens.:

  • Barbara Boxer (D-CA)
  • Scott Brown (R-MA)
  • Bob Casey (D-PA)
  • Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY)
  • Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX)
  • Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH)
  • Olympia Snowe (R-ME)

All of these senators sit on key committees, including Foreign Relations, Armed Services, Intelligence, and Appropriations.

Reps.:

  • Russ Carnahan (D-MO)
  • Howard Berman (D-CA)
  • John Conyers (D-MI)
  • Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX)
  • Barbara Lee (D-CA)
  • Carolyn Maloney (D-NY)
  • Jim McDermott (D-WA)
  • Jim McGovern (D-MA)
  • Jim Moran (D-VA)
  • Chris Murphy (D-CT)
  • Chellie Pingree (D-ME)
  • Jan Schakowsky (D-IL)
  • Jackie Speier (D-CA)
  • Niki Tsongas (D-MA)
  • Chris Van Hollen (D-MD)

As in the Senate, most of these representatives sit on key committees, including Foreign Affairs, Armed Services, Intelligence, Appropriations, and Judiciary.

See Rep. Carnahan’s statement.

*Hunt Alternatives LLC serves as the family office for Ambassador Swanee Hunt and is a separate legal entity from The Institute for Inclusive Security, a program of Hunt Alternatives Fund.

 Travis Wheeler is a legislative adviser to Ambassador Hunt and an advocate at Inclusive Security.

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A woman speaks in an office setting.

Zainab Hawa Bangura speaks at The Institute for Inclusive Security’s annual colloquium for women peacebuilders. Bangura was recently appointed the UN secretary-general’s special representative on sexual violence in conflict. (Inclusive Security archives)

Congratulations to Zainab Hawa Bangura of Sierra Leone on her appointment as the UN secretary-general’s special representative on sexual violence in conflict.

Bangura is the current minister of health and sanitation for the government of Sierra Leone and the former minister of foreign affairs and international cooperation of Sierra Leone. She also advised the United Nations Development Programme on integrating methods of women’s inclusion and participation into their programs in Sierra Leone.

Bangura is a longtime member of our Women Waging Peace Network and has attended our colloquium, an annual event we host that brings together women peacebuilders from conflicts around the world.

Bangura joins an elite group who serve as special representatives of the secretary-general, the significant minority of whom are women. She is the second person appointed to the post that focuses on sexual violence in conflict and will replace Margot Wallström of Sweden. During her tenure, Wallström supported the UN’s Department of Political Affairs in developing guidelines to help mediators address sexual violence when brokering peace agreements and ceasefires.

Much like her predecessor, Bangura recognizes that conflict-related sexual violence is a security issue with wider peace and security implications, so it is important to increase the number of women participants in all processes working to eliminate such violence. Bangura’s work to date has shown that she is a strong advocate for women, and she will continue to promote them as agents of change in conflict areas.

Read the UN press release on Bangura’s appointment here.

Pari Farmani is the development and network coordinator at The Institute for Inclusive Security. She works to maintain a sense of community among Women Waging Peace Network members and connect them to resources to assist them in resolving conflict and building peace in their home countries.

 

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Watch For Pakistanis, Violence Has ‘Profound Impact’ on Life on PBS. See more from PBS NewsHour.

In a time when media often portray Pakistan through the lens of terrorism, a delegation of 12 Pakistani women peacebuilders brought forth a new narrative to the US. They showed the world what women are doing to promote peace and address the root causes of extremism in Pakistan.

While the media rarely recognizes them and their stories, these leaders received unprecedented attention during their visit to DC. These stories are a testament to the courageous work they do every day to prevent violence and promote social cohesion in their country.

Pakistan Delegation Media Roundup

PBS NewsHour: For Pakistanis, Violence Has ‘Profound Impact’ on Everyday Life (see the video embedded above)

NPR: Pakistani Moms Keep Sons From Being Radicalized

Foreign Policy’s The AfPak Channel: Conversations with Suicide Bombers

GlobalPost: Soft Power, Woman Power: Forging a New Security Paradigm in Pakistan

GlobalPost: Pakistani Women Waging Peace the World Over

The Huffington Post: Pakistani Women Unite to Battle Religious Extremism

News International: Pakistani Women Peace Delegation in USA

Jaime Horn is a communications specialist at The Institute for Inclusive Security, where she is responsible for media outreach. Jaime has over 12 years of experience in communications, politics, and international development.

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A woman stands in a field holding a kite

A woman holds a kite printed with “demand Afghan women’s rights” in Chicago earlier this month, where Amnesty International hosted a summit alongside the Chicago NATO Summit to urge world leaders to increase women’s participation in peace negotiations and the security transition. (Photo courtesy of Amnesty International)

Earlier this month at the 2012 Chicago NATO Summit, the Afghan government’s delegation included only one Afghan woman, a member of President Hamid Karzai’s official entourage. Contrast this to the 2011 Bonn Conference where women made up almost a quarter of the Afghan government’s delegation and several participated in a civil society forum tied to the conference.

With women shut out of the security talks in Chicago, Amnesty International put on a shadow summit the first day of the NATO Summit to highlight the lack of attention given to women’s inclusion in the future of Afghanistan. Their summit featured Afghan women leaders discussing their perspectives on peace and transition. In addition to the four Afghans, a veritable “who’s who” slate of longtime women’s champions, including Madeleine Albright, former secretary of state, Melanne Verveer, ambassador-at-large for global women’s issues, and Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) attended the summit.

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