Toggle Main Menu Toggle Search

Open Access padlockePrints

Filters and Fragments: Making Feminist Sense of Security

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Gina Heathcote

Downloads


Licence

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).


Abstract

In this essay, I analyze how feminist work on security is read and understood, where it is located, and the relationship between feminist scholarship and conceptions of security pluralism. I pick up J. Benton Heath's argument that “pluralist security” is a good tool to address widened security agendas and to decolonize international law.1 I also develop Heath's account of “widened security”—which he associates with feminist security studies and with the women, peace, and security agenda—to argue that making feminist sense of widened security requires distinguishing between which feminist knowledge is incorporated into international law and the larger corpus of feminist work.2 I use feminist analysis as a tool for examining, and responding to, the structural inequalities within law, starting with gender, but expanding to intersectional3 and postcolonial feminist insight.4 This approach facilitates the deployment of gender as co-constituted through adjunct vectors of inequality, including, but not limited to, race, sexuality, ableism, or class, as well as the legacies of empire.5


Publication metadata

Author(s): Heathcote G

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: American Journal of International Law Unbound

Year: 2022

Volume: 116

Pages: 254-258

Online publication date: 15/08/2022

Acceptance date: 30/05/2022

Date deposited: 19/02/2024

ISSN (electronic): 2398-7723

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/aju.2022.40

DOI: 10.1017/aju.2022.40


Altmetrics

Altmetrics provided by Altmetric


Share