Department of Peace and Conflict Research, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
Centre for Social Change (CSC), Kathmandu, Nepal.
PLoS One. 2024 May 29;19(5):e0303023. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0303023. eCollection 2024.
Truth telling processes, initiatives to prosecute war-time perpetrators, and ex-combatant reintegration are examples of common peacebuilding practices after war. Yet, little is known of how women are affected by peacebuilding initiatives such as these, or how they perceive these initiatives for peace. For many women, peace after war does not bring peace to everyday life; research shows that domestic violence increases during and after war. In addition, some peacebuilding measures have been found to increase risk and insecurity, not least for women. To better understand the interconnections between gender and post-conflict attitudes to peacebuilding, we asked 2,041 women and men in Sri Lanka and Nepal of their views on post-war peace initiatives. In line with our expectations, we find that women are more skeptical than men towards peacebuilding measures that involve increased risk in everyday life, such as truth-telling and coexisting with former adversaries and warring groups reintegrating in local communities. There are no gender differences pertaining to peacebuilding initiatives that take place far away at the national level, for example, concerning accountability or, in the case of Nepal, the peace agreement. Our findings suggest that international peacebuilding practice is blind to the everyday insecurities of women after war. That a basic gendered lens is missing from most peacebuilding designs is both alarming and deeply troubling, but identifying this critical aspect provides the opportunity for imperative change. By shedding light on the challenges women face after war, we hope this article contributes to finding ways to mitigate unknown and unintended side-effects of peacebuilding efforts, and thereby to the development of better, evidence-based peacebuilding practice-of benefit to both men and women.
真相揭示过程、起诉战时犯罪者的举措以及前战斗人员重返社会,这些都是战后常见的和平建设实践。然而,人们对于女性如何受到这些和平建设举措的影响,或者她们如何看待这些和平建设举措,知之甚少。对许多女性来说,战争后的和平并没有给日常生活带来和平;研究表明,家庭暴力在战争期间和之后会增加。此外,一些和平建设措施已被发现会增加风险和不安全因素,尤其是对女性而言。为了更好地理解性别与冲突后对和平建设的态度之间的相互关系,我们在斯里兰卡和尼泊尔询问了 2041 名女性和男性对战后和平倡议的看法。不出所料,我们发现,女性对涉及日常生活中增加风险的和平建设措施比男性更为怀疑,例如揭示真相以及与前对手和交战团体共存,让他们重新融入当地社区。对于在国家一级开展的、远离日常生活的和平建设举措,例如问责制,或者在尼泊尔的情况下,有关和平协议,两性之间没有差异。我们的研究结果表明,国际和平建设实践对战争后女性的日常不安全感视而不见。大多数和平建设设计中缺乏基本的性别视角,这既令人震惊,又令人深感不安,但认识到这一关键方面为必要的变革提供了机会。通过揭示女性在战后面临的挑战,我们希望本文有助于找到减轻和平建设努力中未知和意外的副作用的方法,从而为更好、基于证据的和平建设实践做出贡献,使男女双方都受益。