Space and Defense
Abstract
The study challenges the clearest, unqualified liberal claim on feminist foreign policy: namely, women equal peace and security while men equal war. In fact, women approach foreign policy challenges as judiciously as men and have proven their statesmanship. Feminist foreign policy promotes gender equality, women empowerment, and socio-economic parity based on a non-hierarchal system, but it fails to offer a resilient, conflict preventing, and environmentally friendly alternative framework capable of reducing contemporary foreign policy challenges.
DOI
10.32873/uno.dc.sd.15.01.1038
Recommended Citation
Abdullah, Sannia
(2024)
"Pushing Boundaries: Feminism, Female Leaders, and the Fate of Feminist Foreign Policy,"
Space and Defense: Vol. 15:
No.
1, Article 5.
DOI: 10.32873/uno.dc.sd.15.01.1038
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/spaceanddefense/vol15/iss1/5
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