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E-raamat: Gender and Diplomacy

Edited by (University of Oxford, UK)
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This volume provides a detailed discussion of the role of women in diplomacy and crafts a global narrative of understanding relating to their current and historical role within it.

Over the last century alone, the majority of Ministries of Foreign Affairs (MFAs) have experienced seismic shifts in their policies concerning the entry, role and power positions of women within their diplomatic institutions at large. Yet despite this metamorphosis, the role of women in the diplomatic sphere continues to remain overlooked, and placed on the fringes of diplomatic scholarship. This book seeks to change this. This volume moves beyond the simple acknowledgment of women entering the diplomatic corps, and seeks to begin a much needed discussion and analysis regarding the type of role women have played and continue to play within the diplomatic sphere, the individual and collective power they hold, their agency for change and the obstacles which continue to remain within diplomacy’s institutions at large. To achieve this aim, the volume chooses to view and frame the experiences of women, and the institutions they served and serve, through a number of timely, relevant, and inter-related concepts; agency, gender, institutional power, and leadership. These concepts provide a set of unique analytical lenses in which the reader can view and examine the historical and present experiences of women in the diplomatic sphere, and do so in a manner, which is structured and conceptual. Furthermore by examining these concepts across time, this volume has the power to then assess how women have sought to reconcile their experiences and understanding within them, and across varying time frames. Consequently, each chapter has a focus, or a link to, at least one of these conceptual lenses, with their chapter discussion contributing to the overall dialogue on these concepts, which is continuously taking place throughout the work.

The work brings together established scholars and experienced diplomatic practitioners in an attempt to tell some of this unfinished story of women in diplomacy, in a context which is historical, theoretical and empirical. The contributors are varied in their style of writing, expression of form and professional experiences, with this variation reflecting the diversity of contributions as a whole. This diversity is a highly important aspect of seeking to bridge the academic-practitioner divide, so often an obstacle to coherent and connected discussion within the realm of diplomatic studies. Indeed, it is only by bringing together the global and diverse voices of women within the diplomatic sphere, voices which have different cultural perspectives, diverse national priorities and individual challenges, can we then begin to fully appreciate and reimagine women as equal participants in the structures, processes and outcomes of 21st century diplomatic practice.

This book will be of much interest to students of diplomacy studies, gender studies, foreign policy and International Relations.

 

Arvustused

'Drawing on the substantial expertise and experience of the authors, this volume of essays provides a rigorous analysis of the gendered nature of diplomacy. The common themes that emerge in the essays, coupled with the concrete recommendations put forward by the authors, offer fertile ground from which academics and policy makers can analyse and improve womens empowerment in the field of diplomacy.' -- From the foreword by Mary Robinson, Former President of Ireland

'This engaging volume discusses how women are changing the content of foreign policy, the practice of diplomacy and the nature of international leadership. In addition to providing valuable research material, this book should be an inspiration both for women hammering at glass ceilings and for foreign ministries and multilateral institutions grappling with the barriers to gender equality.' -- Kate Jones, University of Oxford, UK

'This is a superb series of studies on gender and diplomacy. In its treatment of its subject it raises important questions about what constitutes effective diplomacy in this challenging age. At a time when our profession matters more than ever, it is an important and thought-provoking reading for practitioners and students of international affairs alike.' -- Niall Burgess, Secretary General, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade

'Gender and Diplomacy offers a fascinating and long overdue analysis of the role of gender in diplomacy. Combining scholarly inquiry and practitioner insight, the book sets new standards for understanding the historical and institutional challenges of ensuring a gender-even playing field in diplomacy.' -- Corneliu Bjola, University of Oxford, UK

List of illustrations
ix
Notes on contributors x
Foreword xiv
Mary Robinson
Acknowledgements xvi
Introduction: analysing the dynamics of modern diplomacy through a gender lens 1(12)
Jennifer A. Cassidy
Sara Althari
PART I Getting to the table: historical challenges and reflections
13(68)
1 Women, gender, and diplomacy: a historical survey
15(17)
Helen McCarthy
James Southern
2 Alison Palmer's fight for sex and gender equity in the twentieth-century United States Foreign Service
32(16)
Beatrice Mckenzie
3 From marriage bar towards gender equality: the experience of women in Ireland's Department of Foreign Affairs 1970-2000
48(17)
Anne Barrington
4 Women of the South: engaging with the UN as a diplomatic manoeuvre
65(16)
Devaki Jain
PART II At the table: broken boundaries and persisting institutional challenges
81(138)
5 Towards a feminist US foreign policy? Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's metaphorical diplomacy
83(17)
Eric M. Blanchard
6 Gender, status, and ambassador appointments to militarized and violent countries
100(20)
Birgitta Niklasson
Ann Towns
7 Women in foreign lands: women diplomats and host-country cultures
120(20)
Jane Marriott Obe
8 Women in global economic governance: scaling the summits
140(30)
Susan Harris Rimmer
9 Becoming UN Women: a journey in realizing rights and gaining global recognition
170(17)
Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka
10 Unprecedented: women's leadership in twenty-first century multilateral diplomacy
187(23)
Jessica Fliegel
11 Conclusion: progress and policies towards a gender-even playing field
210(9)
Jennifer A. Cassidy
Index 219
Jennifer Cassidy is a Doctoral Candidate in International Development at the University of Oxford, UK