Description

Book Synopsis
A key book for conflict and peace studies, reveals the gendered nature of peacebuilding, its consequences, and the importance of women playing a part in peace processes in Africa. Even in the best of circumstances, women are all too often excluded from formal peacemaking and peacebuilding processes and relegated to the sidelines as observers or limited to informal peacebuilding strategies. Yet there is enormous potential in these strategies as women often strive to build bridges across political, ethnic, religious, clan and other differences through alliances arising from common concerns around violence, land, access to resources, and protection of their families and communities, and address sources of conflict at both national and local levels. Drawing on cutting-edge research by scholars and women's rights activists in South Sudan, Sudan, Algeria, northern Nigeria, and Somalia, this book focuses on the consequences of the continuing exclusions of women from peace talks and from post-conflict governance structures. The case studies reveal how peacebuilding is gendered and why this matters in developing meaningful and sustainable approaches to peacebuilding. Examining how women activists have made a difference through informal peacebuilding activities, the contributors explore women's efforts to reshapethe post-conflict context by struggling for legislative and constitutional reforms and by advocating for political representation and political inclusion more generally within peacebuilding processes. They also look at how women have pushed back against the conservative Islamist forces that today dominate much armed conflict in Africa. Suggesting that women's formal participation in peace negotiations is vital in bringing about an end to conflict and preventing its resumption, as well as the one of the most effective strategies, this book will be essential reading for scholars and NGOs involved in development, conflict resolution and peacebuilding. The book is the product of a research project on Women and Peacebuilding in Africa, funded by Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Norwegian Foreign Ministry.

Trade Review
This book brings together contributions from nine renowned authors from various academic backgrounds, with a focused interest in African women's issues and broader African women's rights work including activism. ... In tandem with extensive evidence of women's exclusion and their pivotal role in peacebuilding, the book has significantly referenced women's human rights. -- Anthropology Southern Africa

Table of Contents
1. Introduction: The Gendering of Peacebuilding in Africa Aili Mari Tripp 2. Women Activists' Informal Peacebuilding Strategies in South Sudan Helen Kezie-Nwoha and Juliet Were 3. 'Ba Sa Jin Mu' (They Don't Listen to Us): Women and Peacebuilding in North-eastern Nigeria Ayesha Imam, Maina Yahi and Hauwa Biu 4. No Going Back: Somali Women's Fight for Political Inclusion Ladan Affi 5. Sudanese Women's Demands for Rights and Representation in the 2019 Revolution Samia al-Nagar and Liv Tønnessen 6. The Fight for Democracy and Women's Rights in Algeria: A Long Legacy of Struggle Aili Mari Tripp 7. Conclusions: Women's Peace Activism in Africa Ladan Affi and Liv Tønnessen

Women & Peacebuilding in Africa

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    A Paperback / softback by Ladan Affi, Liv Tønnessen, Aili Mari Tripp

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      Publisher: James Currey
      Publication Date: 15/10/2021
      ISBN13: 9781847012814, 978-1847012814
      ISBN10: 1847012817

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A key book for conflict and peace studies, reveals the gendered nature of peacebuilding, its consequences, and the importance of women playing a part in peace processes in Africa. Even in the best of circumstances, women are all too often excluded from formal peacemaking and peacebuilding processes and relegated to the sidelines as observers or limited to informal peacebuilding strategies. Yet there is enormous potential in these strategies as women often strive to build bridges across political, ethnic, religious, clan and other differences through alliances arising from common concerns around violence, land, access to resources, and protection of their families and communities, and address sources of conflict at both national and local levels. Drawing on cutting-edge research by scholars and women's rights activists in South Sudan, Sudan, Algeria, northern Nigeria, and Somalia, this book focuses on the consequences of the continuing exclusions of women from peace talks and from post-conflict governance structures. The case studies reveal how peacebuilding is gendered and why this matters in developing meaningful and sustainable approaches to peacebuilding. Examining how women activists have made a difference through informal peacebuilding activities, the contributors explore women's efforts to reshapethe post-conflict context by struggling for legislative and constitutional reforms and by advocating for political representation and political inclusion more generally within peacebuilding processes. They also look at how women have pushed back against the conservative Islamist forces that today dominate much armed conflict in Africa. Suggesting that women's formal participation in peace negotiations is vital in bringing about an end to conflict and preventing its resumption, as well as the one of the most effective strategies, this book will be essential reading for scholars and NGOs involved in development, conflict resolution and peacebuilding. The book is the product of a research project on Women and Peacebuilding in Africa, funded by Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Norwegian Foreign Ministry.

      Trade Review
      This book brings together contributions from nine renowned authors from various academic backgrounds, with a focused interest in African women's issues and broader African women's rights work including activism. ... In tandem with extensive evidence of women's exclusion and their pivotal role in peacebuilding, the book has significantly referenced women's human rights. -- Anthropology Southern Africa

      Table of Contents
      1. Introduction: The Gendering of Peacebuilding in Africa Aili Mari Tripp 2. Women Activists' Informal Peacebuilding Strategies in South Sudan Helen Kezie-Nwoha and Juliet Were 3. 'Ba Sa Jin Mu' (They Don't Listen to Us): Women and Peacebuilding in North-eastern Nigeria Ayesha Imam, Maina Yahi and Hauwa Biu 4. No Going Back: Somali Women's Fight for Political Inclusion Ladan Affi 5. Sudanese Women's Demands for Rights and Representation in the 2019 Revolution Samia al-Nagar and Liv Tønnessen 6. The Fight for Democracy and Women's Rights in Algeria: A Long Legacy of Struggle Aili Mari Tripp 7. Conclusions: Women's Peace Activism in Africa Ladan Affi and Liv Tønnessen

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