Sanders Campaign gets Sparks and Sparkle

I think Tulsi Gabbard is a very interesting person.

Bryan Hemming's avatarBryan Hemming

Tulsi 3 Caricature – Bryan Hemming  © 2016

On February 12th this year Dan Froomkin, the influential Washington Editor of the Intercept, used an article slamming Hillary Clinton’s slavish adherence the doctrines of Henry Kissinger to solicit likely names for a ‘dream foreign policy team. Taking up the challenge, I dashed off an email expressing grave doubts as to whether there were anywhere near enough politicians in the U.S. political establishment possessing sufficient knowledge of foreign affairs to form a whole team.

Having said that, I do believe there is one politician eminently qualified to lead a dream foreign policy team, and she might even get to do it.

“I cannot remain neutral any longer; the stakes are too high.”

Using those words Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard resigned from her post as vice-chair of the Democratic National Committee on February 28th to endorse the candidacy of Bernie Sanders. Announcing her…

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Women, Peace, and Security

http://www.peacewomen.org/member-states

MEMBER STATES

National Action Plans for the Implementation of UNSCR 1325 on Women, Peace, and Security

How do states implement the Women, Peace, and Security Agenda? How can civil society hold states accountable? National Action Plans (NAPs) are one way to implement Women, Peace, and Security commitments at the country level and to advance accountability. Regional Action Plans (RAPs) are another way of coordinating work in a broader area.

As of February 2016, fifty-seven nations have created a National Action Plan on UNSCR 1325. The following countries have released their NAPs during 2015: Afghanistan, Japan, New Zealand, Palestine and Paraguay. Furthermore, other countries have committed to develop NAP in 2015: Algeria, Angola, Brazil, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Latvia, Portugal, Thailand, Ukraine and United Republic of Tanzania. There are a handful Regional Action Plans as well, such as the one of the African Union and of the European Union.

Both governments and civil society groups are the movers and shakers putting the Women, Peace, and Security Agenda into action. PeaceWomen’s Action Plan Initiative monitors, analyses, and shares UN Member State and Regional Action Plans. PeaceWomen and WILPF more broadly also work at the local and national level to advance National Action implementation.

This section of Who Implements: Member States includes an overview of action plans and lists of action plans by country, region, and theme. It also includes resources for civil society, national, and global reviews, and information on commitments beyond NAPs including a call for action on 2015 commitments and highlights of current innovative work.

PeaceWomen Spotlight

Latest National Action Plan

In December 2015, the government of Paraguay launched the Paraguayan National Action Plan for the implementation of UNSCR 1325 on Women, Peace and Security…

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PeaceWomen Spotlight

Call to Action on 2015 Commitments

October 2015 marked the 15 Anniversary of UNSCR 1325 and the Security Council hold an Open Debate on Women Peace and Security. Member states had the opportunity to renovate and make new commitments. Do you want to know what each country committed to? Click here!

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This is a Copy of an article from October 31, 2013: Dying to Be Men: Symposium Digs for Roots of Gender Violence

http://www.usip.org/publications/dying-be-men-symposium-digs-roots-of-gender-violence

Dying to Be Men: Symposium Digs for Roots of Gender Violence

Published:
October 31, 2013
By:
Viola Gienger
Colonel Birame Diop is considered a rare success in his family’s neighborhood in Senegal — a pilot in his country’s Air Force who went on to serve as a top adviser to the Chief of Staff and a global expert on the role of military in society.

Under Senegal’s social norms, his achievements reflect well on his mother and show that she was a good wife to his father, Diop explained to an audience at the U.S. Institute of Peace this week during a two-day symposium called “Men, Peace and Security: Agents of Change.” Senegalese men are expected to find a house and protect the family’s health and security, regardless of whether their wives work, as they often do, or even regardless of which of them makes more money.

But in a country where 70 percent of the population is between 16 and 35 and jobs are scarce, such expectations pose an almost impossible hurdle to the ideal of manhood.

“The situation is so challenging that men, who are considered as being at the epicenter of everything in our society — the pressure on these people is so high that failure is not at all an option for them,” said Diop, who serves as director of Partners Senegal: Center for Change and Conflict Management. “Some who have not been able to be what their society expected them to be can turn against the same society to express their frustration” through violence, he said.

Diop and more than three dozen keynote speakers and panelists at the symposium waded into volatile subjects like the paradox of hyper-masculinity, the threat of “failed adulthood,” and the lure of power through violence. The 245 participants and a follow-up training for practitioners on a third day explored how male identity and societal norms contribute to violent conflict and, conversely, might be altered to support peace.

The symposium was co-hosted by the World Bank, the North American office of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI); Washington-based Women in International Security (WIIS); the U.S. arm of the Brazilian non-governmental organization Instituto Promundo; and the South Africa-based Sonke Gender Justice Network. The event grew, in part, out of a two-year study on lessons learned about programs for women in Iraq and Afghanistan. One of the most consistent recommendations for ensuring sustainable programs that advance peace and security was to include men.

“The tendency among us is to use gender and women interchangeably,” said Kathleen Kuehnast, director of USIP’s Center for Gender and Peacebuilding. “However, this leaves us with half a solution to many of the problems that plague women and girls in conflict and fragile settings.”

The symposium title is a play on the title of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security, adopted 13 years ago this week to urge governments to devise plans for protecting women and increasing their decision-making role during and after conflicts. More than 40 countries have adopted national action plans, addressing a broad range of issues like representation of women in armed forces and at peace negotiations or ending the scourge of sexual assault and other violence against women.

“This isn’t just a question of women,” said Ambassador Donald Steinberg, deputy administrator at the U.S. Agency for International Development. “This is a question of men, it is a question of society, it is a question of equity, it is a question of global peace and security.”

Research has found “only limited evidence that men are more inherently violent than women,” according to a new USIP Special Report entitled “The Other Side of Gender: Men as Critical Agents of Change.” “Violence is ultimately learned and encouraged in the social environment, which suggests that it can also be unlearned.”

Although most men are not, by nature, violent, men do commit much of the violence, Kuehnast told the symposium. Steinberg cited research showing that men are up to six times more likely to commit and be victims of homicides. But at the same time, studies indicate the propensity has “as much to do with early exposure to violence, with economic frustration, with the militarization of societies, with boys’ coming-of-age rituals and gender-based proliferation of light weapons as it does with testosterone,” he said.

“In excluding the very roles and experiences of men in conflict, including as witnesses and victims themselves of violence, we are also limiting our approaches to solving difficult problems like gender-based violence,” Kuehnast said.

The thought-provoking titles of sessions during the symposium capture the quandaries and the questions: “Dying to be Men: Masculinities in Conflict and After;” “How Men Are Made: Cultures of Hyper-Masculinities;” “All Revved Up and Nowhere to Go;” and “Nurturing the Ex-Combatant.”

“What we’re discovering is that there is a societal fragility that we often don’t pay attention to,” said Ian Bannon, sector manager of the Fragile States, Conflict and Social Development Unit in the Africa Region of the World Bank. “And we believe that this question of masculinity, of how do you become a man, has something to do with that.”

Bannon and other experts at the symposium outlined a range of factors contributing to the puzzle. In South Sudan, the “bride price” a young man must pay his intended wife’s family, often in cows, has become exhorbitant, sometimes leading to thefts and resulting in violence. In Rwanda, a young man isn’t considered a man until he builds a house and marries, a prospect made extremely difficult with new housing regulations.

In Afghanistan, riven by three decades of war, boys learn that “if they use violence, they will gain membership in a powerful peer group,” said Haji Nasrullah Baryalai Arasalai, a Pashtun tribal elder and director of the Community Association and the International Foundation of Hope. He remembers his youth in the years before the conflicts that began in 1978, when he attended university to study agriculture alongside girls.

“The last three decades of war … have heavily damaged the social fabric of Afghanistan,” he said.


Zainab Hawa Bangura

Christopher Kilmartin
Zainab Hawa Bangura, the United Nations Secretary General’s Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict, recounted the daily horrors she hears about: A Somali woman who was raped, along with her daughter. A father fighting for justice for his two daughters, both under six years old and both of whom had been raped. In Bosnia 20 years after the war there, perpetrators walk the streets freely, run for political office, and are allowed to police their communities. She’s also met men who were sexually assaulted in wartime.

“In combating sexual violence in conflict, we must bring everybody [to] the table,” Bangura said, “because there’s no such thing as women’s peace or men’s security.”

The U.S. military also has struggled with accepting women in its forces, most conspicuously with the menace of sexual assault – an estimated 30,000 incidents a year. Sexual assault perpetrators often are survivors of childhood maltreatment, hold hypersexual ideologies, believe in rape myths, and think of men and women as adversaries, said Christopher Kilmartin, a Distinguished Visiting Professor at the U.S. Air Force Academy and a professional psychologist.

Kilmartin called the incidence of rape in the military “outrageous,” but he also lamented what he said was the accepted but counter-productive American concepts of “opposite sex,” or worse, the “battle of the sexes.”

“I don’t think we are going to be able to solve this problem until we start to see men and women as being on the same team,” Kilmartin said, noting that he was speaking only for himself, not the Academy. “We’ve got to end sexism as a social activity.”

The issue is becoming more prominent in the U.S. military as more women join the forces, said General Ray Odierno, the Army Chief of Staff. “We have to change our culture,” he said. “We have this thing in the Army – never leave a fallen soldier. That should include all walks of life.”

Men – and women — can be successfully encouraged and taught to redefine masculinity and take constructive action, such as soldiers challenging colleagues on pornography or young men being encouraged to express emotions without violence. Programs in Lebanon and Croatia work with boys and young men to deconstruct traditional, stymying ideas of masculinity.

“We do know that boys are born with the inherent ability to form … connections of solidarity with others,” said Gary Barker, international director of Instituto Promundo, a Brazil-based non-governmental organization that works for gender equality and an end to violence against women, children and youth. “This is not a male or female trait; that’s a human trait.”

Diop, the Senegalese Air Force colonel, said that, at a more national level, governments can help with measures that provide jobs to the burgeoning numbers of youth but also better governance and effective communication about cultural beliefs.

“Culture can change, even if it takes time,” Diop said. “Beliefs can evolve positively. If you discuss it the right way, and you have the patience and you use the right wording to discuss these issues, they can change.”

October 31, 2013
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About Our Experts

Kathleen Kuehnast
Senior Gender Advisor
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Countries of Expertise:
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Issue Areas of Expertise:
Conflict Analysis and Prevention, Countering Violent Extremism, Economics, Gender, Post Conflict Reconstruction, Religion
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Women in the Peace Process: Making Peace Last in Colombia
Date
March 8, 2016 – 9:30am
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Women have played groundbreaking roles in Colombia’s peace process between the government and the country’s largest rebel group, the FARC. With a peace agreement in sight and on the occasion of International Women’s Day, join the U.S. Institute of Peace on March 8 for a briefing on the status of women in peace processes, with a focus on the Colombia case. The discussion is co-sponsored by USIP’s Colombia Peace Forum and the Conflict Prevention and Resolution Forum.

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More On: Countering Violent Extremism, Gender

About USIP

The United States Institute of Peace works to prevent, mitigate, and resolve violent conflict around the world. USIP does this by engaging directly in conflict zones and by providing analysis, education, and resources to those working for peace. Created by Congress in 1984 as an independent, nonpartisan, federally funded organization, USIP’s more than 300 staff work at the Institute’s D.C. headquarters, and on the ground in the world’s most dangerous regions.

Download About the United States Institute of Peace factsheet (PDF).

The Futures Past of the Women, Peace and Security Agenda

Maybe we would do well to give the work of the UN in general a bit more credit. Who knows what they’ve been trying to achieve for women’s rights?

drljshepherd's avatarThe Disorder Of Things

"What are you doing for Peace?" Launch Event UN Secretariat staff mark the occasion of the 70th anniversary of the United Nations. 17 September 2015. UN Photo/Rick Bajornas.

This essay is a much abridged and lightly edited version of an article of the same name by Paul Kirby and Laura J. Shepherd published on 8 March 2016 in International Affairs.

UNSCR 1325, the foundational resolution of the eight that form the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) policy architecture, has strikingly few critics – or, at least, few who would openly dispute its headline ambition: to achieve global gender equality. It seems particularly appropriate to celebrate the WPS agenda on International Women’s Day, adopted by the United Nations in recognition of the ongoing global struggle for women’s rights. Our modest contribution to IWD celebrations this year is the launch of a special issue of International Affairs, which documents the advances and limits of the WPS agenda…

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New Fences on the Old Continent: Refugee Crisis Pushes Europe to the Brink

Even as Chancellor Merkel continues pursuing a deal with Turkey, Austria and its Balkan neighbors to the south have taken things into their own hands. With fences going up across the region, Greece is in trouble and the EU can’t figure out what to do. By SPIEGEL Staff

Please go to:

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/border-closures-spell-refugee-back-up-in-greece-a-1080643.html#spLeserKommentare

Playing Pokies?

https://www.getup.org.au/campaigns/pokies-play-you/pokies-petition-costello/you-don-t-play-the-pokies-they-play-you?t=4REogTBLE&utm_campaign=Pokies+set+to+%22slaughter%22&utm_content=10577&utm_medium=email&utm_source=blast

 

 

You don’t play the pokies, they play you

Industry whistleblowers broke the silence on poker machines last week, in explosive documentary Ka-Ching! Pokie Nation.

Composers, mathematicians and animators went on the record to reveal the truth: you don’t play the pokies, the pokies play you.

With few politicians willing to speak out against this multi-billion dollar industry, it’s up to us to stop the con.

We’ll be working with Tim Costello and the Alliance for Gambling Reform, who have all the expertise we need to take on the pokies industry. All that’s missing is a grassroots movement to back them in.

Will you sign onto the petition to get the pokies con out of our communities and our politics?

For too long the pokies industry has deflected attention away from its machines, targeting the “irresponsible gamblers” who play them. Ka-Ching! went inside the machines to show how addictive technologies are used to keep people playing well beyond their means.

So what next?

We’re working with Tim Costello and the Alliance for Gambling Reform, who have all the to hold to account the people who make, control and regulate these machines – from Woolworths, the largest poker machine owner in the country, to government ministers, many of whom sit cosily in the pockets of the gaming industry.

If we can build enough power together in coming weeks, GetUp members will work closely with the Alliance for Gambling Reform to uncover the truth about poker machines. Together we’ll:

  1. Blow the lid off the gambling industry by exposing how poker machines are designed to keep people playing and fuel addiction
  2. Shame companies profiting from pokies addiction, costing them customers and investors
  3. Take on the poker machine industry in the courts.

Then, when we’ve demonstrated the deliberate, misleading conduct of the pokies industry, we’ll take the fight to Parliament House, to the doorsteps of our MPs and senators.

GetUp is joining forces with the Alliance for Gambling Reform on ‘The Pokies Play You’ campaign. Read more about the Alliance in the drop-down link below.

Poker machines are mathematically programmed to return around 90% of the money put in – put in $10, get back $9; then put in your $9 and get back $8.10, and so on. This means, the more you play, the more you lose, until users are left with nothing.

Revelations about poker machine design have shown how machines are custom built for “process addiction”, triggering positive chemical responses in the brain. Users are awarded with sounds and animations to reinforce “desirable” behaviours.

Poker machines manipulate the user through techniques like “losses disguised as wins”. This is when a user is fed some winning lines, which are celebrated as a win with bright lights and loud noises, when they’ve actually experienced a net loss.

Another technique is “near misses”, where the reel of the machine is laid out to mislead the user into thinking they’ve only just missed out on a win.

With almost 200,000 poker machines in Australia, generating billions in revenue every year, pokies represent a ruthless transfer of wealth from ordinary Australians ensnared by addictive technologies, to the gaming industry and government.

Fed up with your community being conned by an industry built on addiction? Let’s stop the pokies con.