Peace is On the Line: The Women, Peace and Security Agenda Must Be Fulfilled

We must keep the world’s women at the fore; our security at home is intricately linked to the equality and security of women around the world. 

Job loss and financial hardship are the tip of the iceberg of issues affecting women and girls across the globe. Pictured: Sergeant Farida Yasmin of Dhaka Metropolitan Police of Bangladesh. (UN Women / Fahad Abdullah Kaizer)

You’ve heard it before: Women have been pushed to the brink by the impacts of the pandemic. In the United States alone, the pandemic could take women back 10 years in work place equality, and mothers are hit the hardest. Increased economic insecurity for women has led to what C. Nicole Mason, president of the Institute for Women’s Policy Research, is calling a “shecession.” 

Job loss and financial hardship are the tip of the iceberg of issues affecting women and girls across the globe. In refugee camps in Kenya and Uganda, incidents of intimate partner violence, child marriage and female genital mutilation are on the rise, while girls education suffers. In Afghanistan, restrictions on movement have hindered women’s peace-building efforts in their communities and domestic violence has spiked. In conflict zones including Yemen and Syria maternal mortality will likely increase, as will incidents of gender based based violence in refugee camps.

In the coming years that it will take to recover from the coronavirus pandemic at home, we must keep the world’s women at the fore because our security at home is intricately linked to the equality and security of women around the world. 

For example, the disempowerment of women at the household level is strongly associated with terrorism. As Dr. Valerie Hudson explained to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, “Train men to terrorize women, and you train them in terrorism.”

Conversely, “When women succeed—the world succeeds,” as eloquently noted by Congresswoman Lois Frankel (D-Fla.). This pithy statement embodies the spirit and purpose of the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) Agenda.

Last month, the U.S. Civil Society Working Group for WPS convened legislators, practitioners and peacebuilding organizations—including the Alliance for Peacebuilding, Council on Foreign Relations, One Earth Future Foundation, the U.S. Institute of Peace, the Wilson Center and Women’s Action for New Directions—to discuss how the pandemic has affected peacebuilding efforts, how we can institute the principles of WPS within the U.S. context, and what we can learn from peacebuilders past and present to help solve the unique challenges of this era.

Here’s what they had to say: 


What is Women, Peace and Security (WPS)? What progress has been made since the passage of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1325 in 2000?

 


What challenges remain? 


Women’s stories are often overlooked.

Who are the women peacebuilders, from the highest levels of government to the violence (or conflict)-affected communities, you want to be remembered past and present this Women’s History Month? 

https://twitter.com/AfPeacebuilding/status/1366820602523381760

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How do we ensure Women, Peace and Security becomes a central component of U.S. foreign policy and of governments around the world? 


How does WPS enhance national and international security?


Men are important allies in the WPS agenda. How can the WPS community better engage men and boys? How can men and boys effectively champion WPS?

https://twitter.com/WomensAction/status/1366817093124059141

During COVID-19, women have been leading their communities in response efforts.

How are women in your community or worldwide responding to COVID19? How has the pandemic affected progress on the WPS Agenda? 


What is the future of Women, Peace and Security? What should we be looking for in the next 20 years of the movement?

https://twitter.com/us_ypscoalition/status/1366819162648117251

What are your go-to Women, Peace and Security resources (and sources)?

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About

Corey Greer is the Communications Director at Women's Action for New Directions, a nonprofit organization devoted to building women's political power to advocate for security and peace with justice. She was previously on the Gender Equality team at the United Nations Development Program in Istanbul and the Gender, Women and Democracy team at the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs.