🌟 1. What is the Feminist Perspective in IR?
The Feminist perspective in International Relations argues that:
👉 World politics has been shaped mostly by men and male-dominated ideas.
Feminists want to highlight women’s experiences, voices, and roles in global politics.
They ask:
- “Where are women in IR?”
- “How does global politics affect women and men differently?”
- “Why are women ignored in traditional IR theories?”
In simple terms:
👉 Feminism says we cannot fully understand world politics without including women’s experiences and gender issues.
🌟 2. Why Feminism Emerged in IR
Traditional IR theories like Realism, Liberalism, Marxism were created by men and focused on:
- war
- power
- states
- national security
But they ignored:
- women
- gender roles
- domestic violence
- economic inequality
- human rights issues
Feminist scholars believed this was incomplete and biased.
🌟 3. Key Ideas of Feminist IR
✔ 1. Gender matters in world politics
Gender influences:
- who makes decisions
- who fights wars
- who suffers most in conflicts
- who gets access to resources
✔ 2. Traditional IR is male-dominated
IR focuses on masculine ideas like:
- power
- aggression
- military strength
- competition
Feminists say these ignore women’s realities.
✔ 3. Women experience war differently than men
Women often face:
- sexual violence
- displacement
- loss of economic support
- unpaid care responsibilities
These are often ignored in mainstream IR.
✔ 4. Peace and security must include women
Women’s participation increases chances of peace.
Example:
UN Resolution 1325 → Women, Peace & Security agenda.
✔ 5. Everyday life is also international politics
Global politics is not only about war and diplomacy.
It includes:
- household work
- migration
- trafficking
- global poverty
- health risks
Women are central to these issues.
🌟 4. Types of Feminist Approaches in IR
| Type | Focus |
|---|---|
| Liberal Feminism | Women need equal rights, representation, and opportunities in global politics. |
| Radical Feminism | International system is built on patriarchy (male domination). |
| Marxist/Socialist Feminism | Economic system + patriarchy exploit women. |
| Postcolonial Feminism | Women in developing countries face additional challenges (colonial history, racism, poverty). |
| Constructivist Feminism | Gender ideas and identities shape global behavior. |
| Critical Feminism | Power, knowledge, and gender relations are interconnected. |
🌟 5. What Feminism Says About Global Issues
| Issue | Feminist Explanation |
|---|---|
| War & Conflict | Women are affected differently; sexual violence is used as a weapon. |
| Security | Should include human security, not just military security. |
| Global economy | Women face wage gaps, unpaid labour, exploitation. |
| Migration | Many migrant women face abuse, trafficking, and unsafe jobs. |
| Globalization | Benefits men more; women often trapped in low-paid work. |
| Peacebuilding | Including women leads to stronger and longer peace. |
🌟 6. Key Feminist Thinkers in IR
| Thinker | Contribution |
|---|---|
| Cynthia Enloe | “Bananas, Beaches, and Bases,” militarism and women’s roles |
| J. Ann Tickner | Critique of realism from a feminist perspective |
| Christine Sylvester | Feminist theories of global relations |
| Spike Peterson | Gender, economy, global politics |
| Gayatri Spivak | Postcolonial feminist theory |
🌟 7. Strengths of Feminist IR
- Highlights voices of women, girls, and vulnerable groups
- Expands meaning of security to include everyday life
- Reveals hidden violence, exploitation, and inequality
- Challenges male-biased global policies
- Promotes inclusive peacebuilding
🌟 8. Criticisms of Feminist IR
- Too broad and diverse; no single theory
- Some say it is more moral advocacy than “scientific theory”
- Critics argue it underestimates the role of states and power politics
- Hard to measure gender-related data in IR
- Some believe it focuses more on women and less on global structures
🌟 9. Short Exam Answer (5 Marks)
The Feminist Perspective in IR argues that international politics cannot be understood fully without examining gender relations and women’s experiences. Feminists believe traditional IR theories ignore women and focus mainly on masculine ideas like power, war, and military security. They highlight how global issues—war, migration, poverty, trafficking—affect women differently. Feminist IR promotes gender equality, human security, and women’s participation in peacebuilding. Key thinkers include Cynthia Enloe and J. Ann Tickner.
