1st Edition

Women, Peace and Security in Canada and the United States A Fragmented Peace

Edited By Katrina Leclerc, Nisha Singh, Shirley Graham Copyright 2027
240 Pages
by Routledge

240 Pages
by Routledge

Women, Peace and Security in Canada and the United States  critically examines the challenges and contradictions of implementing the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda within the highly polarised political landscapes of Canada and the United States. In an era marked by democratic strain, and shifting security priorities,  A Fragmented Peace  brings together leading scholars, policymakers,... Read more

Preamble  Chapter 1: Across a Shared Border: Feminist Solidarity and the State of WPS in Canada and the United States  Section 1: Navigating Political Fragmentation: Reassessing WPS Amid Hyper-Polarization, Militarization, and Contemporary Security Challenges  Chapter 2: Civil Society Under Pressure: Women, Peace and Security Implementation in Polarized Democracies  Chapter 3: The WPS Agenda Beyond the UN: Reforming the Multilateral and Local Hierarchy  Chapter 4: Between policy and polarisation: The WPS-defence nexus through the lens of Canadian Armed Forces culture change  Chapter 5: Women, Peace and Security and 21st Century Security Challenges  Section 2: Contextualising WPS Implementation: Regional and Country-Specific Perspectives on Progress and Challenges  Chapter 6: Now You See It, Now You Don’t: Canada and the WPS Agenda  Chapter 7: WPS in the US: Legislating Peace Amidst Polarisation – The Pitfalls and Possibilities  Chapter 8: WPS Implementation in Afghanistan: Lessons Learned and Call to Action  Chapter 9: Local Power, Global Support: Rethinking WPS Partnerships in the Asia-Pacific  Section 3: Broadening the WPS Framework: Emerging Themes, Intersecting Agendas, and Inclusive Pathways  Chapter 10: Gender Essentialism in WPS: The Political Erasure of Trans Women in North American Security Discourse  Chapter 11: Men and Masculinities in WPS: Gender Trauma as a Driver of Violence  Chapter 12: Youth as Catalysts for De-polarisation: Leveraging the Youth, Peace and Security Agenda in North America  Chapter 13: Beyond Vulnerability: Gender, Climate Change, and National Security

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Biography

Katrina Leclerc is a PhD candidate and part-time professor in Conflict Studies at Saint-Paul University, and sessional lecturer at the University of Winnipeg. She serves as chair of the Women, Peace and Security Network - Canada.

Nisha Singh is the Senior Global Policy and Advocacy Manager at Women for Women International and serves as co-chair for the US Civil Society Working Group on WPS. She holds an MA in Public Policy and a Gender, Peace and Security Certificate from Georgetown University. 

Shirley Graham is the Director of the Global Gender Policy Program at George Washington University, where she also leads the Athena Initiative: advancing human security in international affairs. She has a PhD from the National University of Ireland, Maynooth.

“At a moment when decades of hard-won feminist policy gains are being tested by polarisation and political retreat, this volume does more than document friction – it offers a vital map for navigating it. By foregrounding the indispensable role of civil society, confronting policy neglect, and engaging emerging challenges such as Youth, Peace and Security and disruptive technologies, the contributors ensure that “security” remains grounded in human dignity rather than military lethality. Even in a fragmented peace, this book stands as a testament to the hard work of repair and the collective responsibility to build an inclusive global security architecture.”

Kat Fotovat, Co-Founder, Peace Pays and (ret) Acting Ambassador for Global Women’s Issues, U.S. Department of State

 

“Comparing the WPS civil society movements in Canada and the US reveals the importance of our looking outside the UN to understand what can happen when the determined pursuit of genuine security and sustainable peace is investigated with feminist curiosity about diverse women's ideas and experiences. Leclerc and Singh and Graham have made me think afresh.”

Cynthia Enloe, author of Twelve Feminist Lessons of War & Research Professor, Clark University

 

"Both Canada and the US have played vital roles in sustaining the Women, Peace and Security agenda globally. This volume explores what is happening to this WPS leadership at a time of profound political and economic upheaval, as well as tension between these two close allies. The analysis shows that the fundamental driver of progress in meeting the ambitions of the WPS agenda is feminist civil society working with and beyond state institutions. This is timely and essential reading, authoritatively written by key activists and policymakers." 

Anne Marie Goetz, Clinical Professor, Center for Global Affairs, New York University & former Policy Director of Governance, Peace and Security, UN Women

 

“This comprehensive collection brings together scholarly analysis and practitioner reflections on the Women, Peace and Security agenda across multiple countries, sectors, and themes. What I appreciated most from reading this book was the rich insight into challenges arising from contemporary polarisations and the significance of gender-inclusive strategies.”

Rebecca Tiessen, Professor, School of International Development and Global Studies, University of Ottawa & Co-Director of the Research Network on Women, Peace and Security