WOMEN IN U.N PEACEKEEPING
As
peacekeeping has evolved to encompass a broader humanitarian approach, women
have become increasingly part of the peacekeeping family.
Women
are deployed in all areas – police, military and civilian – and have made a
positive impact on peacekeeping environments, both in supporting the role of
women in building peace and protecting women's rights.
In
all fields of peacekeeping, women peacekeepers have proven that they can
perform the same roles, to the same standards and under the same difficult
conditions, as their male counterparts. It is an operational imperative that we
recruit and retain female peacekeepers.
In
1993, women made up 1% of deployed uniformed personnel. In 2012 , out of
approximately 125,000 peacekeepers, women constitute 3% of military personnel
and 10% of police personnel in UN Peacekeeping missions. While the UN
encourages and advocates for the deployment of women to uniformed functions,
the responsibility for deployment of women in the police and military lies with
Member States. UN Police Division launched 'the Global Effort' to recruit more
female police officers into national police services and into UN police operations
around the world. The goal is to have 20% of female police by 2014.
Striving
towards gender parity amongst UN staff is a priority for the UN
Secretary-General. At the UN Headquarters in 2012, 48 per cent of staff were
women and 52 per cent men, with the most disparity showing at the mid and
senior levels. In peacekeeping operations and special political missions, the
figures are more challenging, with women making up only 29 percent of
international and 17 per cent of national staff.
These
statistics have remained largely unchanged over the past few years. During
2013, the Departments of Field Support, Peacekeeping Operations and Political
Affairs undertook a project called "Bridging the Civilian Gap in Peace
Operation" to better understand the barriers to attracting, retaining and
advancing female staff in the field. The report has been published and
recommendations are being developed for implementation in 2014 and beyond. With
civilian field staff representing 53 per cent of all UN Secretariat staff, an
increase in the number of civilian women in peace operations will help towards
increasing the number of female staff serving with the United Nations at large.
Find
out more in our gender statistics section or download the Consolidated
Statistical Information on Female Military and Police Personnel in UN
Peacekeeping Operation from 2005 - 2010. Please see Below:-
Click on the image to see the full info graphic
For
its part, the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) continues to respond
to the call in all Women, Peace and Security mandates to increase the numbers
of women in peacekeeping by advocating for the deployment of more women.
However the ultimate responsibility for getting more women into the military
peacekeeping lies with the individual countries that contributing troops and
police.
Why is it important to have female peacekeepers?
Female
peacekeepers act as role models in the local environment, inspiring women and
girls in often male-dominated societies to push for their own rights and for
participation in peace processes.
The increased recruitment of women is critical for:
Ø empowering women in the host community;
Ø addressing specific needs of female ex-combatants during
the process of demobilizing and reintegration into civilian life;
Ø helping make the peacekeeping force approachable to women
in the community;
Ø interviewing survivors of gender-based violence;
Ø mentoring female cadets at police and military academies;
Ø interacting with women in societies where women are
prohibited from speaking to men.
The
presence of women peacekeepers can also:
Ø help to reduce conflict and confrontation;
Ø improve access and support for local women;
Ø provide role models for women in the community;
Ø provide a greater sense of security to local populations,
including women and children;
Ø broaden the skill set available within a peacekeeping
mission.
Source : http://un.org/en/peacekeeping/women
Source : http://un.org/en/peacekeeping/women
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