The Peace and Conflict Gender Analysis: UNIFEM's Research in the Solomon Islands
Author: A Moser
Date: 2007
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10 pages
(115 KB)
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How can the use of gender analysis help improve post-conflict peace processes? This paper published in Gender and Development discusses the research methodology and results of the 2005 Peace and Conflict Gender Analysis (PCGA) conducted by the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) in the Solomon Islands. The use of gender analysis to shape peace processes would help solidify women’s gains in status and contribute to economic and civil society development.
Until recently, practitioners and policy makers have tended to ignore the gender dimensions of armed conflict and peace building. Today, there is a greater recognition that women and men play multiple roles in these processes and experience their impact in different ways. UNIFEM conducted a PCGA in the Solomon Islands after the 1998-2003 conflict. While the conflict was low-intensity (150-200 deaths and around 450 gun-related injuries), it involved significant trauma and upheaval, with more than 35,000 people displaced as a result of the violence. The PCGA examined the experiences and roles of women and men during the conflict and in peacetime as well as the impact of the conflict and peace processes on gender relations. It was carried out in five communities where discussions were facilitated by researchers with separate groups of women and men.
As is not uncommon in contexts of armed conflict, changes in the roles of men and women appear to have contributed to ongoing community tension in the Solomons:
The PCGA methodology has implications for planning and implementation of post-conflict recovery and peace building programmes:
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Source:
Moser, A., 2007, 'The Peace and Conflict Gender Analysis: UNIFEM's Research in the Solomon Islands' Gender and Development, volume 15, issue 2