Women Have Shown Their Skill at Making Peace. Let Them Work.
from Women Around the World and Women and Foreign Policy Program

Women Have Shown Their Skill at Making Peace. Let Them Work.

The Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet participate in the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo. NTB/REUTERS

Originally published at Washington Post

November 2, 2020 10:32 am (EST)

The Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet participate in the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo. NTB/REUTERS
Article
Current political and economic issues succinctly explained.

This article was authored by Jamille Bigio, senior fellow with the Women and Foreign Policy program, and Alexandra Bro, former research associate with the Women and Foreign Policy program.

More From Our Experts

Twenty years ago, the United Nations Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 1325, which declared something that should have been self-evident: Women around the world are directly affected by war and violence — so they should have a say in how conflicts are resolved.

More on:

Women and Women's Rights

Women's Political Leadership

This is no pipe dream. Study after study shows that women’s participation in efforts to make and preserve peace can have a decisive impact. Female negotiators have shaped peace processes from Colombia to Northern Ireland, resulting in agreements that are more durable and better implemented. Higher levels of women’s political participation are associated with a lower risk of civil war and of conflict relapse. The evidence is clear: Give women full and equal rights and opportunities, and countries will become more peaceful and prosperous.

Yet women are too often excluded from efforts to work toward peace. In a new Council on Foreign Relations report, we found that between 1992 and 2019, women constituted, on average, just 13 percent of negotiators. About seven out of every ten peace processes did not include any women as mediators or as signatories. (The latter often represent a combination of the negotiators, guarantors and witnesses to a peace deal — who remain predominantly men).

Read the full piece at the Washington Post>>

More From Our Experts

More on:

Women and Women's Rights

Women's Political Leadership

Creative Commons
Creative Commons: Some rights reserved.
Close
This work is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) License.
View License Detail
Close

Top Stories on CFR

Defense and Security

John Barrientos, a captain in the U.S. Navy and a visiting military fellow at CFR, and Kristen Thompson, a colonel in the U.S. Air Force and a visiting military fellow at CFR, sit down with James M. Lindsay to provide an inside view on how the U.S. military is adapting to the challenges it faces.

Myanmar

The Myanmar army is experiencing a rapid rise in defections and military losses, posing questions about the continued viability of the junta’s grip on power.

Egypt

International lenders have pumped tens of billions of dollars into Egypt’s faltering economy amid the war in the Gaza Strip, but experts say the country’s economic crisis is not yet resolved.