Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 22
pro vyhledávání: '"Miriam J. Anderson"'
Autor:
David Malet, Miriam J. Anderson
Transnational Actors in War and Peace provides a comparative examination of a range of transnational actors who have been key to the conduct of war and peace promotion, and of how they interact with states and each other. It explores the identities,
Autor:
Miriam J. Anderson, Galia Golan
Publikováno v:
International Negotiation. :1-19
Despite the global norm favoring women’s participation in peace negotiations, women continue to face constraints in accessing, influencing, and benefitting from peace settlements. This special issue of International Negotiation lays the groundwork
Autor:
Miriam J. Anderson, Marc Y. Valade
Publikováno v:
International Negotiation. :1-27
Women’s legislative representation often increases following armed conflict. Although various studies suggest a relationship between gender-inclusive peace negotiations and better outcomes for women, we know little about the processes linking these
Publikováno v:
Global Studies Quarterly. 3
Feminist scholarship has convincingly shown that violence is more accurately conceptualized as a continuum rather than a war/peace binary. While recent scholarship has elucidated women's peace activism during armed conflict, peace negotiations, and p
Autor:
Miriam J. Anderson, Jamie Gillies
Publikováno v:
Commonwealth & Comparative Politics. 56:157-176
This article considers the role and influence of women’s groups and larger national women’s social movements during two different constitutional moments: the lead-up to the finalisation of ...
Autor:
Liam Swiss, Miriam J. Anderson
Publikováno v:
Politics & Gender. 10:33-61
The high percentage of women in Rwanda's parliament is well known. At 64%, it scores far above the world average of about 22% (IPU 2013). Rather than an anomaly, Rwanda is representative of many postconflict developing countries that feature women's
Autor:
Miriam J. Anderson
In 1915, women from over thirty countries met in The Hague to express opposition to World War I and propose ways to end it. The delegates made three demands: for women to be present at all international peace conferences, a women's-only peace confere