联合国维持和平经济与当地性产业:联系和影响

K. Jennings, Vesna Nikolic-Ristanovic
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引用次数: 57

摘要

对“维持和平经济”的经济或社会文化和政治影响的分析不多。本文以波斯尼亚-黑塞哥维那、科索沃、利比里亚和海地这四个过去或正在执行联合国维和任务的冲突后国家为例,从性别角度探讨维和经济的一些后果和持久影响。这篇论文特别关注维和经济与性产业之间的相互作用。它审查了维持和平经济的一些特点和影响,认为这些特点和影响是高度性别化的,但维持和平经济的“正常化”使这些影响被忽视或模糊。它还认为,这些性别特征和影响具有(或可能具有)广泛和持久的后果。最后,本文考虑了联合国努力解决维和经济负面影响的初步影响,特别是对性剥削的零容忍政策,以及在维和行动中“主流化”性别并通过维和行动促进性别平等的努力。该文件表明,高度性别化的维持和平经济的存在和潜在的长期延续可能会破坏性别目标和目标,而性别目标和目标是大多数和平行动的组成部分。
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UN Peacekeeping Economies and Local Sex Industries: Connections and Implications
“Peacekeeping economies” have not been subject to much analysis of either their economic or socio-cultural and political impacts. This paper uses a gendered lens to explore some ramifications and lasting implications of peacekeeping economies, drawing on examples from four post-conflict countries with past or ongoing United Nations peacekeeping missions: Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, Liberia, and Haiti. The paper is particularly concerned with the interplay between the peacekeeping economy and the sex industry. It examines some of the characteristics and impacts of peacekeeping economies, arguing that these are highly gendered – but that the “normalization” of peacekeeping economies allows these effects to be overlooked or obscured. It also contends that these gendered characteristics and impacts have (or are likely to have) broad and lasting consequences. Finally, the paper considers the initial impacts of UN efforts to tackle negative impacts of peacekeeping economies, particularly the zero-tolerance policy against sexual exploitation and the effort to “mainstream” gender and promote gender equality in and through peacekeeping. The paper suggests that the existence and potential longterm perpetuation of a highly gendered peacekeeping economy threatens to undermine the gender goals and objectives that are a component of most peace operations.
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