The interaction between women representatives and their own communities is one reason why women’s inclusion is seen to lead to more durable peace agreements. In this episode, we discuss concrete strategies to build linkages between these two, drawing on experiences from Palestine, Yemen and Northern Ireland. The topic is timely as digitalisation and the rise of different social movements underline the need to make peace processes more democratic.
Guests are Heba Zayyan, the Head of UN Women Sub-office in Gaza; Kawkab Al-Thaibani, the co-founder of the Women for Yemen network; Dr Catherine Turner, Associate Professor at the Durham Law School. The podcast is hosted by CMI's Communications Manager Antti Ämmälä.
How spiking food prices could increase instability in the Middle East and North Africa?
Renewed hope for peace in Libya 10 years after the revolution
How can peace mediation stay relevant in the post-Covid-19 world?
What is Martti Ahtisaari's vision for peacemaking?
How can peace mediation build more sustainable societies?
20 years on: It’s about time we walk the talk on women’s role in peacemaking
The realignment of global affairs
Cyber attacks and wars fought with proxies: How can peacemakers respond to challenges posed by hybrid influencing?
Unraveling the relationship between climate change and conflicts
How to support the fragile peace process in Yemen?
Peacetech: Is it just another buzzword?
The Finnish way in peacemaking
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Jim & Bill (It‘s Another Day)
HauntingLive
Dr. Paul’s Worldviews
The Ben Shapiro Show
Morning Wire