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Journal ArticleDOI

Women as agents of ethnic reconciliation? women's ngos and international intervention in postwar bosnia–herzegovina

Elissa Helms
- 01 Jan 2003 - 
- Vol. 26, Iss: 1, pp 15-33
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TLDR
The authors examines how women are represented by women's nongovernmental organization (NGO) activists and their foreign donors in postwar reconstruction initiatives in Bosnia-Herzegovina and argues that dominant donor representations of women as peacemakers and natural agents of ethnic reconciliation present a paradox for the women they target.
Abstract
This article examines how women are represented by women's nongovernmental organization (NGO) activists and their foreign donors in postwar reconstruction initiatives in Bosnia–Herzegovina. I argue that dominant donor representations of women as peacemakers and natural agents of ethnic reconciliation present a paradox for the women they target. Women are charged with achieving the very political goals of ethnic reconciliation and refugee return, yet the essentialist constructions used to encourage women's peacemaking roles effectively marginalize them from formal political power. When local women activists use similar “affirmative” gender essentialisms, they risk closing off women's potential for influence in the formal (male) political sphere. However, I argue, given the moral and political climate of postwar Bosnia, in which politics is perceived as a corrupt, male sphere, this strategy allows women to gain moral authority and real, though indirect, power with which to achieve their often very political goals.

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Demystifying Micro-Credit The Grameen Bank, NGOs, and Neoliberalism in Bangladesh

TL;DR: In this article, an ethnographic study of the effects of micro-credit on gender relations in rural Bangladesh is presented, focusing on the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize winner, the Grameen Bank of Bangladesh and three other leading non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in the country.
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Beyond NGO‐ization?: Reflections from Latin America

Sonia E. Alvarez
- 29 Jun 2009 - 
TL;DR: Sonia Alvarez reconsiders what she had earlier labelled ‘the Latin American feminist NGO boom’ of the 1990s and proposes that Latin American feminisms and other social movements may be moving away from the particular organizational forms and practices that characterized NGO‐ization in the past.
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“Women, Children and Other Vulnerable Groups”: Gender, Strategic Frames and the Protection of Civilians as a Transnational Issue

TL;DR: In this article, the use of gender essentialisms in transnational efforts to advocate for the protection of war-affected civilians is questioned, since they arguably undermine the moral logic of the civilian immunity norm on which their normative claims are based.
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"Failed Development" and Rural Revolution in Nepal: Rethinking Subaltern Consciousness and Women's Empowerment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that women's active support for the decade-long Maoist insurrection in Nepal has captured the attention of academics, military strategists, and the development industry.
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Global Civil Society and the Local Costs of Belonging: Defining Violence against Women in Russia

TL;DR: In 1998, women from crisis centers from all over Russia gathered in Moscow for a conference to discuss the formalization of their thus-far loose network into a national association.
References
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Book

Gender and Nation

TL;DR: The dualistic nature of women's citizenship, as both included and excluded from the general body of citizens, has been examined in this article, and the particular ways in which the entry of women into the military has been linked to women's equality as citizens are examined in this context.
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Family Feuds Gender Nationalism and the Family

Anne P. McClintock
- 01 Jul 1993 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, Anderson argues that all nationalisms are gendered, all are invented, and all are dangerous dangerous, not in Eric Hobsbawm's sense as having to be opposed, but in the sense of representing relations to political power and to the technologies of violence.
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colonialism, nationalism, and colonialized women: the contest in India

TL;DR: The nationalist response to the treatment of women in India by identifying a scriptural tradition was to construct a reformed tradition and defend it on the grounds of modernity as mentioned in this paper, creating the image of a new woman who was superior to Western women, traditional Indian women, and low-class women.
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Woman-Nation-State