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How women can help give peace a chance



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Published Date: 27 March 2008
INCLUDING women in the peacekeeping process improves the prospects of success for an operation – because females can defuse a male-dominated stand-off, experts have revealed.
Professor Gerard DeGroot, a historian from the University of St Andrews, believes that the presence of female soldiers in peacekeeping units not only encourages more civilised behaviour among male soldiers, but provides good role models for mostly fe
male refugees.

The academic will outline the important role of women in the peacekeeping process at a major conference in Rwanda this weekend. He will travel to Kigali to address an international event aimed at increasing the participation of female soldiers, police officers and civilian personnel in peacekeeping missions.

Prof DeGroot, one of the few male experts on the role of female soldiers, will explore the gender imbalance issue and outline why the inclusion of female soldiers in such units tends to improve the performance of the unit as a whole.

Speaking in advance of the conference, he said: "The inclusion of women changes the dynamic and makes it more like a normal, civilised society.

"Soldiers do some pretty nasty things when they're abroad," he said. "You get a masculine test of virility. The women have a calming effect and can defuse a tense stand-off."

The percentage of women in peacekeeping forces is very low – about 2 per cent – and he believes this causes problems when the vast majority of refugees are women and children.

"During the UN operation in Somalia in 1993, local women who ventured outside the refugee camps to collect firewood were frequently raped by peacekeepers," he said.

Prof DeGroot has been involved in the research for the past ten years, acting as a consultant to the UN, Nato and the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs.

His work contributed to the passage of UN Security Council Resolution 1325, which formally recognises the need to mainstream gender issues in UN operations.

Prof DeGroot will examine the behaviour of male soldiers during notorious peacekeeping missions when not accompanied by women, and the dynamic created when women take part in peacekeeping operations.

He added: "Further problems result from the fact that male peacekeepers too often act like conquering soldiers. The most notable UN successes had a greater-than-normal female presence. In both operations, the proportion of females was just under 50 per cent.

"There is no evidence that women make better peacekeepers, but a great deal of evidence to suggest that the presence of women improves an operation's chances of success. A better gender balance means that the operation more closely resembles civilian society.

"Its members are therefore more likely to observe social conventions that define civilised behaviour."

Dr Patrick Green, a senior lecturer in psychology at Heriot-Watt University, said:

"I think it is true that there is a strong audience effect and men tend to moderate their aggressive behaviour with more women in the audience.

"Men are more prone to aggressive displays which can run out of control sometimes. In the presence of women, that is less likely to happen."





The full article contains 515 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 26 March 2008 10:10 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Samcafe,

Glasgow 27/03/2008 07:03:38
Mrs Thatcher and Mrs Bhutto showed the way
2

Dave from Barra ©,

Western Isles 27/03/2008 07:18:46
Yeah, right.
3

Yane,

27/03/2008 08:54:50
Weird eh? Prof De Groot makes me want to draw blood. Mibbee ahm no a proper girlie...
4

JayDeeTee,

27/03/2008 09:56:29
Wait until a few are killed in the line of duty.
5

Horrible Cankers at the Cyber Shebeen,

27/03/2008 10:13:24
Maybe it removes the primal urge to rape from male soldiers...when they have captured a large amount of females, who are then at their disposal...perhaps having female soldiers as colleagues is a reminder to them that women are human beings and not toys to be abused during times of war...
6

Yane,

27/03/2008 12:19:13
Aye, HC, but what proportion of women would it take to change the culture in which they find themselves? Don't you think if you enter that world & you took em on the red light would go on you? Why should we expect that women will be peaceful & kind in such circumstances? I don't think Lynndie England changed a damn thing & got ten years for being one of the gang.
7

Horrible Cankers at the Cyber Shebeen,

27/03/2008 12:31:34
Hi Yane...the pressure is on women in the forces..including the police force...to conform and assimilate..be 'one of the boys'..so I agree with your statement wholeheartedly...unfortunately the hierarchy dictates (to men and women)just exactly who does what and if you dont like it...tough...it takes someone strong of character to go against the grain and be able to stand up for themselves...assert themselves and deal with the bullies..the overbearing and domineering.....perhaps you are correct and I was being rather optimistic....but I would still hope...that some rapes and sexual assaults would be averted because a soldier has the eyes of a female colleague on him...call me naive..

Still...we can always hope and yes...'the red light' does go on you...
8

Miss H,

27/03/2008 15:26:38
I have always had a wee fantasy that women join armies around the world in vast numbers and gradually destroy them from within. It could be done. The whole military-industrial complex systematically undermined until it implodes. But destined to remain but a fantasy I fear.
9

Stu_R_20,

27/03/2008 17:04:02
As soon as an article cites a Psychology lecturer as a primary source one has to doubt its reliability......
10

John Blackley,

Florida 27/03/2008 17:32:06
When I worked as a barman at Reid's of Partick, whenever a fight broke out in the bar we'd get one of the waitresses from the lounge to come through and break it up. Worked every time and saved us getting our heads kicked in.

Perhaps there is something to the professor's theory.
11

weeshooie1,

Wollongong 27/03/2008 20:39:37
Aye, far gone are the days when the air would resonate with such cries as 'Don't run, ye'll bile yer watter' and 'Haw hen, show's yer jiggly bits' and would be enough to defuse some rather hairy situations.
12

Ard Righ,

The Rock Of Edinburgh 27/03/2008 21:08:21
"How women can help give peace a chance"

Yes, by not being involved in any public or professional capacity whilst menstruating.

Yes, by stop watching television and reading those stupid trivia magazines, not being so utterly self obsessed and paying more attention to their loved ones and realising more altruistic behavior in general.

The latter goes for men also.
13

somerferg,

Perth 28/03/2008 00:15:41
#12 - well how's about this then - no man should be involved in any public or professional capacity between the ages of 11 and 81. Yup with that in place I can see the end to all war, sexual assaults, discrimination, world poverty, global warming. Oh yes and and most importantly, the end of stupid comments about women menstruating.

 

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