Thursday, March 29, 2012

Sex and World Peace

 

In 2001, BYU Political Science professor Valerie Hudson (now at Texas A& M) approached me about joining her in a new project looking at the status of women in the world. We had become friends and colleagues through BYU's Kennedy Center as we jointly tilted at windmills trying to defend and save various international endeavors at BYU. Her offer was great timing. Newly implemented BYU travel restrictions meant that I could no longer conduct field research in Israel/Palestine--which had been my main focus of research for over a decade. Our efforts resulted in the establishment of WomanStats (www.womanstats.org) which is an amazing on-line database concerning women that is comprised of over 300 variables for 174 countries. That data base has been painstakingly compiled through the work of dozens of dedicated BYU students who are passionate about improving the status of women worldwide. Over time we added several other co-PIs (Primary Investigators) to our project including Mary Caprioli from the University of Minnesota-Duluth and Bonnie Ballif-Spanvill who recently retired as the director of BYU's now defunct Women's Research Institute. We met each summer to work on projects including three journal articles I helped with: 

Hudson, Valerie M., Mary, Caprioli, Bonnie Ballif-Spanvill, Rose McDermott, Chad F. Emmett, “The Heart of the Matter: The Security of Women and the Security of States.” International Security. Vol. 33, No. 3 (Winter 2009) 7-45. 

Caprioli, Mary, Valerie M. Hudson, Rose McDermott,  Bonnie Ballif-Spanvill, Chad F. Emmett, S. Matthew Stearmer.  “The WomanStats Project Database: Advancing an Empirical Research Agenda.” Journal of Peace Research. Vol. 46, No. 6 (November 2009) 839-851.

Caprioli, Mary, Valerie M. Hudson, Rose McDermott, Chad F. Emmett, Bonnie Ballif-Spanvill. “Putting Women in their Place.” Baker Journal of Applied Public Policy. Vol. 1 No. 1 (2007), 12-22

We then turned to a book in hopes that our message--treat women better and the world will be more peaceful--would reach more people. In July 2009 we four authors met at the University of Minnesota-Duluth for several days to outline and plan the book. A month later our family left to teach at the BYU Jerusalem Center for a year. I packed up digital and paper files of my WomanStats research to take with me. During the rare spare days or evenings during January-April 2010 I worked on my sections of the book. My main efforts were focused on describing the maps in the beginning of chapter three and explaining many of the bottom up efforts of chapter six and some of the top down efforts in chapter five--especially those relating to the Islamic World.

 

My wonderful Co-Authors (l to r) Mary Caprioli, Valerie Hudson and Bonnie Ballif-Spanvill  during a windy July 2009 evening in Duluth Minnesota where we all met to plan and out-line our book.

Based on the title (more precisely it should be titled Gender and World Peace, but hey, sex sells), some may open the pages hoping to see something revealing. Not here. The only illustrations are eleven maps (we had to pay to have them included) including these two (thanks to Mark Jackson from the BYU Library Geospatial Services for making them). Copies of all of the other maps can be found at the WomanStats web site. 





What follows is a page from the Columbia University Press web site:  http://cup.columbia.edu/book/978-0-231-13182-7/sex-and-world-peace

Sex and World Peace

Valerie M. Hudson, Bonnie Ballif-Spanvill, Mary Caprioli, and Chad F. Emmett

 
April, 2012
Cloth, 304 pages, 11 color maps, I figure, 17 tables
ISBN: 978-0-231-13182-7
$26.50 / £18.50
Columbia University Press


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Sex and World Peace unsettles a variety of assumptions in political and security discourse, demonstrating that the security of women is a vital factor in the security of the state and its incidence of conflict and war.

The authors compare micro-level gender violence and macro-level state peacefulness in global settings, supporting their findings with detailed analyses and color maps. Harnessing an immense amount of data, they call attention to discrepancies between national laws protecting women and the enforcement of those laws, and they note the adverse effects on state security of abnormal sex ratios favoring males, the practice of polygamy, and inequitable realities in family law, among other gendered aggressions.

The authors find that the treatment of women informs human interaction at all levels of society. Their research challenges conventional definitions of security and democracy and shows that the treatment of gender, played out on the world stage, informs the true clash of civilizations. In terms of resolving these injustices, the authors examine top-down and bottom-up approaches to healing wounds of violence against women, as well as ways to rectify inequalities in family law and the lack of parity in decision-making councils. Emphasizing the importance of an R2PW, or state responsibility to protect women, they mount a solid campaign against women's systemic insecurity, which effectively unravels the security of all.



1 comment:

  1. I am so pleased to see images of Bonnie Ballif -Spanvill and to hear of her work to bring our arrention to the ongoing violence against women.... I have just ordered the book "Sex and World Peace" to which she has contributed... If anyone reads this and knows of Bonnie's email could they contact her for me ... I knew Bonnie as a new convert in Manhattan. I helped to start a Nurse Midwifery service in Provo/Orem. I have some personal insights about violence to women and would love to see Bonnie again .. I will be in Provo on May 8-14 2014....email maryross18@gmail.com Phone : 505 795 4538

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