Undermining the Prevailing of Feminist Foreign Policy: The Case of Argentina
-Anaïs Martin
“Feminist foreign policy means to get states on board, but states can’t be simply patriarchal states that all of a sudden start talking the talk but not walking the walk … It means states have to rethink what it means to be a state and that means the states have to be more transparent, less militarized, more democratic… .”
- Cynthia Enloe (October 2021) in Hacía Una Política Exterior con Perspectiva de Género
Anaïs Martin is a first-year graduate student in Conflict Resolution at Georgetown University. She recently graduated with her first MSc in Gender, Peace, and Security at the London School of Economics and holds a BA in Politics from King’s College London. Since 2019, she has worked alongside peacebuilding NGOs in the United Kingdom and internationally. Currently, she is working alongside the Center for Social Justice Research, Teaching and Service at Georgetown to promote social immersion programs. Anaïs’ research has focused on processes of peace and peacekeeping across the Latin American region, and more specifically in the Southern Cone. She recently submitted her master’s thesis on the gendered role of United Nations peacekeeping operations for troop-contributing countries such as Argentina.
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