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Cynthia Enloe: ‘Be sceptical of militarization’
A domestic turn: commentary by Cynthia Enloe
Review: What to learn from women’s experience of war
Without Mothers, There Is No War
Where Are the Women, Really?
The lie of ‘women and children’
Cynthia Enloe’s Final Clark Lecture: ‘Feminist Curiosity is for These Dark Times’
The Militarization of U.S. Culture
Agency, Power, and the Armed Forces: On the Shifting Role of Women at War
Open lecture with Cynthia Enloe: Is there room for feminism in a time of militarization?
Welcome to an open lecture on feminism in relation to current events in Ukraine, but also Sweden's move to join NATO, with Professor Cynthia...
Cynthia Enloe: ‘Be sceptical of militarization’
It doesn't empower all men, but militarization does empower certain kinds of men. Militarization also diverts scarce public resources to...
A domestic turn: commentary by Cynthia Enloe
Cynthia Enloe is a research professor in the Department of International Development, Community, and Environment (IDCE), and is affiliated with...
Review: What to learn from women’s experience of war
Cynthia Enloe's 'Twelve Feminist Lessons of War' brilliantly demonstrates the importance of women's experience of and thinking on conflict,...
Without Mothers, There Is No War
50 years of feminist scholarship also demonstrates that war does not occur without sexual assault, just as it cannot be prosecuted without civilian casualties.
Where Are the Women, Really?
Cynthia Enloe was the first to ask "Where are the women?" But states with feminist foreign policies have tried to answer that question and fallen short.
The lie of ‘women and children’
Arguments made by US leaders in support of intervening in Syria are patriarchal and misogynist.
Cynthia Enloe’s Final Clark Lecture: ‘Feminist Curiosity is for These Dark Times’
Cynthia Enloe's Final Clark Lecture: 'Feminist Curiosity is for These Dark Times'. October 16 @ 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.. Cynthia Enloe. Feminist theorist and...
The Militarization of U.S. Culture
Since Sept. 11, publicly criticizing the U.S. military has been viewed as disloyalty, and Afghan and U.S. women have paid the price.
Agency, Power, and the Armed Forces: On the Shifting Role of Women at War
Cynthia Enloe considers the various feminist approaches to women in the military. Via University of California Press
Cynthia Enloe
@CynthiaEnloeStats
About
A feminist scholar who has commented on the gendered impacts of dictatorship in Equatorial Guinea, focusing on women's rights under oppressive regimes.