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Introduction to UNSCR 1325 ++ Chris Coulter, PhD.

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1 Introduction to UNSCR 1325 ++ Chris Coulter, PhD

2 Historical Overview ”We the peoples of the United Nations determined to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war which twice in our lifetime has brought untold sorrow to mankind, and to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and small..”

3 “… we call on the Governments of the world to encourage women everywhere to take a more active part in national and international affairs, and on women who are conscious of their opportunities to come forward and share in the work of peace and reconstruction as they did in war and resistance.” Eleanor Roosevelt 1946

4 The Cold War The Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) 1946

5 UN Decade for Women 1975-1985 “Equality, Development and Peace” (declared by UN General Assembly) From: Development served to advance women To: Development not possible without women

6 Women’s World Conferences (States in comb. with Civil society): Mexico City 1975: International Women’s year Copenhagen 1980 Nairobi 1985: All issues women’s issues, Peace & UNIFEM Follow-up 4th conference in Beijing 1995: The Beijing Platform for Action. ”Women’s rights as human rights”

7 Declaration on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (1967) Convention on the Elimination of all Discrimination Against Women ‘CEDAW’ (1979) ’Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women’ (1993) Beijing Platform for Action (1995) From ”women” to ”gender” Gender mainstreaming (ECOSOC)

8 1990s- Activism & women’s organizations for peace Violence against women in conflict (Bosnia & Rwanda) and “women’s rights as human rights” Prostitution and trafficking of women during UN Peace operations

9 1995-2000 Beijing 1995 PFA, Chapter E: women and armed conflict Gender mainstreaming of policy and peace operations 1st Gender Advisors in UN operations Arria Formula meetings (2000) Windhoek Declaration and the Namibia Plan of Action

10 UNSCR 1325 on ”Women, peace and security” October 31, 2000 First time recognized as relevant in the context of international peace and security by the most powerful UN actor – the Security Council

11 The most powerful division of the UN is the Security Council, which all member states are bound by the UN Charter to obey

12 UNSCR 1325 Relates to international law and ongoing developments such as the UN Charter, Beijing conference, Geneva Conventions, Rome Statute & CEDAW MAIN THEMES: Participation (entire peace process) Protection (incl. ‘prevention’ and ‘protection’) Gender mainstreaming (both men and women’s needs have to be addressed)

13 UNSCR 1325 Peacekeeping DDR Broader security issues: Transitional justice Post-conflict governance VAW

14 UNSCR 1325 Participation in peace and security related decision making at all levels Protection addresses women's needs and the provision of assistance during and after conflicts Prevention is discussed broadly with regards to avoiding violence and transforming conflicts peacefully

15 PPP draws conceptually from and is also influenced by 4 key areas related to peace and security: 1.Human Security Framework 2.Conflict Transformation Discourse 3.Humanitarian Accountability 4.Women's Rights

16 Human Security: Freedom from want and Freedom from fear Kofi Annan (2000)

17 Conflict Transformation includes traditional elements of conflict resolution: mediation, dialogue, negotiation. goes beyond tradition by drawing attention to issues of rights and justice, promoting inclusive decision- making and participation.

18 Humanitarian Accountability Key element of the women, peace and security discourse. Arises from the basic protection needs in emergency and civil war situations Guidelines and codes of conduct Increased understanding of the urgency and centrality of women's basic needs

19 Women's Rights Many issues in Universal Declaration of Human Rights remain unaddressed During Cold War focus on civil and political issues Public – private divide Demand for specific attention to women’s rights in the 1970s CEDAW: a bill of rights for women

20 Beijing 1995: Platform for action Poverty Education Health care Violence Armed conflict Unequal access to resources, power and decisionmaking structures Lack of mechanisms to promote women effectively Inadequate respect for women’s human rights Stereotyping and inequality in media Environmental concerns Discrimination against the girl child

21 Beijing PFA – Chapter E: Women and Armed Conflict Peace is inextricably linked with equality between women and men and development

22 UNSCR 1325 (2000) Then what? The role of women’s organizations 36 Action Plans UN system (gender advisers, gender mainstreaming and policy structures) Regional organizations - OSCE 2004, EU 2005, African Charter UNIFEM: Violence against women campaign Start to address misbehavior, use and abuse by peace operations personnel of local women (SEA)

23 2008- International debates on Protection of Civilians Increased understanding of the role of sexual violence in conflict (DRC, Timor-Leste, Kosovo) in combination with increased media attention New central players: France (EU presidency), the US (Rice and Clinton), Liberia etc, ‘Chatham house’ Resolution 1820 (2008) focus on addressing systematic sexual violence in conflict AU: African Union Gender Policy 2009 & NATO (SG, Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council, SHAPE): Bi SC Directive 40-1 (Sept 2009)

24 Women as actors or as victims?

25 SUMMING UP ”Women, Peace & Security” Resolutions: 1325 (2000) Original resolution – participation, protection & gender mainstreaming 1820 (2008) Protection – sexual violence 1888 (2009) Protection – sexual violence (implementation) Reaffirms the importance of 1325(2000) and 1820 (2008) 1889 (2009) Peace building, 1325 anniversary & indicators 1960 (2010) Sexual violence (ending impunity)

26 Peace is not the absence of war. It is the presence of justice and the absence of fear. Dr. Ursula Franklin

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