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No peace without women: Women, Peace and Security Agenda

21.01.2022 - Article

They work behind the scenes to bring about peace but women are often underrepresented in formal peace negotiations.
That’s why Germany is committed to implementing the UN Security Council Women, Peace and Security Agenda around the world.

Third Federal Government Action Plan to implement Resolution 1325

united against sexual violence: The Cameroonian organisation HOFNA, with the support of Germany, helps women in the north of the country and internally displaced persons in other parts of the country to build independent and self-determined lives for themselves.
united against sexual violence: The Cameroonian organisation HOFNA, with the support of Germany, helps women in the north of the country and internally displaced persons in other parts of the country to build independent and self-determined lives for themselves.© HOFNA

In October 2000, the United Nations Security Council emphasised the importance of women in peace processes by adopting Resolution 1325. Since then, Germany has been working around the world to implement the Women, Peace and Security Agenda adopted at the time: in crisis regions, in multilateral organisations and at regional level.

Commitment to peace away from the negotiating table

In many crisis regions, women have long been performing crucial work in peace processes – yet this work often goes unnoticed. Women negotiate with militia groups to free their children. They create safe spaces in crisis regions to protect their communities. They negotiate humanitarian corridors to ensure access to food supplies, often long before aid organisations arrive on the scene.

This is in stark contrast to formal peace negotiations, in which women still do not generally play any official role. Between 1992 and 2019, on average only 13 percent of negotiators were female, although studies show that the involvement of women increases the chances of long-term peace and results in agreements that contain more regulations that benefit women and men equally.

In a speech to the German Bundestag, Foreign Minister Baerbock said on 12 January 2022:

This is about representation, about rights and about resources. After all, if half of the population are unable to participate as equals and do not have equal representation or pay, then democracies are not complete. On the other hand, around the world we’re seeing that the erosion of rights of women and girls is a gauge of the growing strength of authoritarian forces.

Resolution 1325: the basis for the Women, Peace and Security Agenda:

When the Security Council adopted Resolution 1325 in 2000 focusing on the role of women in peace and security processes, it was celebrated by many as a sensation. For the first time, the Security Council confirmed that the involvement of women in creating and preserving peace is necessary. Conflict prevention, peace processes and post-conflict peacebuilding were thereby acknowledged as women’s and therefore human rights. Moreover, for the first time the Security Council showed that sexual and gender-based violence is not an unavoidable side-effect of war but a crime that must be systematically prevented and punished.

Over the years, it has been given concrete substance by follow‑up Resolutions 1820, 1888, 1889, 1960, 2106, 2122 and 2242 and by Resolutions 2467 and 2493, which were sponsored by Germany.

Working for women, peace and security

At international level, the Women, Peace and Security Agenda was one of the focuses of Germany’s Security Council membership in 2019 and 2020. During Germany’s Presidency in April 2019, Resolution 2467 was successfully adopted calling for victims of sexual violence to be supported and perpetrators to be called to account.

Networks in Africa and Latin America

Members of the African Women Leaders Network, here at an AWLN conference to mark the Year of Refugees, Returnees and Internally Displaced Persons, 2019
Members of the African Women Leaders Network, here at an AWLN conference to mark the Year of Refugees, Returnees and Internally Displaced Persons, 2019© Verlaine Soobroydoo

Germany is also engaged on behalf of the Women, Peace and Security Agenda outside the UN context. As a co-initiator of the African Women Leaders Network, Germany supports women in transformation processes in African countries, particularly in the spheres of governance, peace and stability. The German-Latin American network Unidas, founded in 2019, also promotes ties and supports feminist projects organised by Latin American organisations.

Activity in crisis regions

In crisis contexts, Germany fosters the political participation of women, for example, through the Women’s Peace and Humanitarian Fund, in which Germany plays an influential role as the largest donor. Germany also cooperates with the local civilian population to prevent sexual violence and strengthen survivors. Together with a large number of partners such as the Mukwege Foundation, medica mondiale, the International Organisation for Migration and the All Survivors Project, Germany is, for example, helping provide medical and psychosocial support to survivors of sexual violence.

Further Information

The German Federal Government’s Action Plan for the Women, Peace and Security Agenda 2021 to 2024

Action Plan of the Government of the Federal Republic of Germany on the Implementation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security for the Period 2017‑2020

Implementation Report on the Action Plan of the Federal Republic of Germany on the Implementation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 for the Period 2013 to 2016

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