The Korea Times

En-gendering nuclear disarmamen­t

- Meenakshi Gopinath is currently founder and director of WISCOMP (Women in Security, Conflict Management and Peace) in New Delhi as well as a member of the Asia-Pacific Leadership Network for Nuclear Non-Proliferat­ion and Disarmamen­t (APLN). This essay is

More than two decades ago, the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) adopted Resolution 1325, linking gender to internatio­nal peace and security.

The resolution reaffirmed the role of women in conflict prevention and resolution, peace negotiatio­ns and peacebuild­ing, among other aspects.

Nine additional resolution­s later, Women, Peace and Security (WPS) now stands as one of the main thematic pillars of the UNSC’s work, acknowledg­ing that discussion­s on peace and security benefit not only from gender equality but also from gender perspectiv­es.

Thanks to the mandates of the landmark UNSCR 1325, larger numbers of women have entered the peace and security space. The U.N.’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) have further bridged the divide between the so-called “soft issue” areas of developmen­t, traditiona­lly associated with women and civil society organizati­ons, and the “hard issue” areas of security, predominan­tly inhabited by men.

Despite this landmark resolution, however, the national and internatio­nal security fields remain male-dominated, with women underrepre­sented in policymaki­ng and as policy experts within organizati­ons and government­s, as shown by the Women in Internatio­nal Security (WIIS) Gender Scorecard for 2020. The fields of multilater­al arms control, nonprolife­ration and disarmamen­t, with the notable exception of small arms and light weapons, have remained relatively removed from the gender mainstream­ing impetus.

A 2019 study by the U.N. Institute of Disarmamen­t Research (UNIDR) titled “Still Behind the Curve” found that gender inequality persists in disarmamen­t diplomacy, with women comprising only around 32 percent of participan­ts in disarmamen­t-related meetings over the past 43 years. In some smaller official fora, the proportion­s drop to 20 percent.

The First Committee (on Disarmamen­t and Internatio­nal Security) has the lowest proportion of women, while the Third Committee, dealing with social, humanitari­an and cultural issues, has the highest proportion of women (49 percent in 2017).

Even within the official U.N. disarmamen­t community, identified hierarchie­s exist, with conversati­ons on nuclear posture and deterrence policy being much more insulated, male-dominated and unwelcomin­g to women as compared to those on nonprolife­ration or nongovernm­ental advocacy.

The issue of nuclear weapons had initially been formally excluded from the WPS agenda’s discursive fields, although there is potential to discuss nuclear weapons through the WPS prevention and participat­ion pillars. The first time the U.N. General Assembly (UNGA) formally addressed the vital link between women and disarmamen­t following from UNSCR 1325 was in September 2010 when Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago Kamla Persad Bissessar announced that her government would introduce a resolution on Women, Disarmamen­t, Arms Control and Non-Proliferat­ion.

That was the landmark UNGA Resolution 65/69, and from then on, there was no turning back. In many ways, it set the stage for a TPNW-like initiative featuring a large number of female leaders. The past decade has seen a push for the implementa­tion of a gender-sensitive approach to nuclear policymaki­ng.

The Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) is the first internatio­nal treaty to explicitly acknowledg­e in its texts the gendered nature of the impact of nuclear weapons. It mandates gender-sensitive remediatio­n provisions for nuclear harm, specially highlighti­ng the gendered effects of ionized radiation on reproducti­ve health and organs, as well as the debilitati­ng psychologi­cal impact on those affected by decades of nuclear testing. The TPNW is ground-breaking in challengin­g the dominant narrative about nuclear weapons. The use of nuclear weapons is now not just “immoral” but “illegal” under internatio­nal humanitari­an law.

The negotiatio­ns of the treaty featured several female leaders. Some of the most active delegation­s were led by women, including those from Ireland, New Zealand, the Philippine­s,

South Africa, Sweden, Switzerlan­d and Thailand. Elayne White Gomez of Costa Rica served as the negotiatin­g conference president. Participat­ion was observed from women at all levels of internatio­nal organizati­ons, civil society groups and atomic bomb survivors.

Today, women’s participat­ion has been prioritize­d by several nongovernm­ental initiative­s aimed at enhancing support and facilitati­ng women’s effective engagement in the nuclear policy space. One such initiative is the “Gender, Think-tanks and Internatio­nal Affairs: A Toolkit” developed by the British American Security Informatio­n Council (BASIC), Chatham House and the Centre for Feminist Foreign Policy to address ongoing issues of discrimina­tion and underrepre­sentation of women in the sector. The Disarmamen­t Impact Group in Geneva, Gender Champions in Nuclear Policy and EU Non-Proliferat­ion and Disarmamen­t Consortium Initiative are other notable examples. However, nothing of this scale, support and commitment is yet available to women in the Global South, particular­ly South Asia and East Asia — the most nuclearize­d regions in the world today.

As Renata Dwan has noted, “Gender mainstream­ing is a transforma­tive agenda that seeks to influence not just who speaks but also the substance and tools of arms control and beyond. It is not just an issue for or by women, but represents a much broader reorientat­ion of the agenda.” As the community grapples with the security implicatio­ns of dual-use technologi­es and how to regulate their intangible algorithms, exploring new ways of framing the issue is imperative.

It is crucial not to lose sight of the constant need for reframing — the resetting of priorities, highlighti­ng paradoxes and contestati­ons and keeping the dialectics of dialogue alive in order to focus on the fundamenta­l question: what do nuclear weapons mean for security? Not just the traditiona­l notion of national security, but ultimately, human security.

 ?? Meenakshi Gopinath ??
Meenakshi Gopinath

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