Maria Tanyag

Maria Tanyag
Australian National University | ANU · Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs

BA, BA Hons (First Class), MA Research (First Class), Doctor of Philosophy

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31
Publications
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326
Citations

Publications

Publications (31)
Article
Forgotten crises’ constitute a permanent background to any present and future global humanitarian and development efforts. They represent a significant impediment to promoting lasting peace given concurrent catastrophes exacerbated by climate change. Yet, they are routinely neglected and remain unresolved. Building on critical and feminist approach...
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When and why do state responses to crises such as the covid-19 pandemic embody hypermasculinity? How does state hypermasculinity contribute to mortality during a pandemic? This article examines state hypermasculinity as a main atrocity risk factor and as a root cause of preventable deaths arising from failures in pandemic response. It focuses on th...
Article
iwishi couldw riteth epoemi wantor eadina timeo fcrisis {repeat} ineed towriteth epoemi wantor eadina timeo fcrisis {repeat} thisi snotth epoemi needtow riteina timeo fcrisis {repeat} thisi sjustat est ofawri terina timeo fcrisis {repeat} —Teresia Teaiwa (2013) Reflecting on the two previous conversations in Politics & Gender (2015 and 2017) regard...
Article
Drawing on depletion through social reproduction and political economy of violence against women (PEVAW) approaches, we show how the context of violence intensifies the depletion of women’s lives as they labor to meet their household needs; and how this depletion heightens their vulnerability to violence in conflict-affected contexts and inhibits t...
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Drawing on depletion through social reproduction (DSR) and political economy of violence against women (PEVAW) approaches, we show how the context of violence intensifies the depletion of women's lives as they labor to meet their household needs; and how this depletion heightens their vulnerability to violence in conflict-affected contexts and inhi...
Article
Disasters, as forms of crisis, offer opportunities to place in sharper focus historical and ongoing inequalities in the production and reproduction of everyday life. The opportunity for transformative change, however, risks being lost when representations of disaster increasingly obscure and silence the full costs and complexity of post-disaster re...
Chapter
This chapter situates the growing academic and policy interest in advancing international normative frameworks namely the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) and Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) in ASEAN within broader feminist critiques of the ‘protection gap’ that results from the ‘siloing’ of international security and peace agendas. It builds on re...
Chapter
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Feminist conceptualizations of global violence are less partial and more encompassing of all forms of harm, exploring the connections between micro and macro level violence through a gender lens. Understanding violence against women, its causes and its consequences in a global context has never been more important given our crisis-prone world chara...
Article
In a crisis-prone world, the number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) uprooted by both armed conflicts and environmental disasters has drastically increased and displacement risks have intensified. Despite the growing attention within global security and development agendas to sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR), there remain stri...
Article
Natural disasters are increasingly causing displacements globally, and such negative impacts of climate change are expected to increase exponentially. Women and girls in particular distinctly endure long-term or gradual harms while in displacement, such as heightened risks of sexual and gender-based violence, including exposure to sexually transmit...
Article
As the feminist adage goes, ‘the personal is political’. In the same vein, Alicia Ely Yamin opens her book with two stirring personal anecdotes—her grandmother’s protracted labour that left forceps scars on her mother’s forehead, and her own miscarriage. These stories foreground her life devoted to advancing sexual and reproductive health and right...
Article
Feminist scholars have critically demonstrated the links between the global political economy, social reproduction and gender-based violence. This article builds on this scholarship by investigating restrictions to reproductive freedom and their connection to the depletion of women’s bodies in the global political economy. Specifically, I use the D...
Chapter
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This chapter reconceptualises global violence and security through a feminist political economy framework. Violence and insecurity is intimately related to unequal political and economic power. However, the ‘continuum of violence’ is obscured by masculinist norms of security within gendered structures of political economy especially the division of...
Article
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Most studies of the gendered impact of conflict focus on sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) atrocities committed in high-intensity conflict environments. In contrast, this article focuses on the patterns of SGBV in Mindanao, Philippines – an environment of protracted low-intensity conflict within a fragile state. We examine the current Mindana...
Article
This article examines the political contestations over sexual and reproductive rights reform in the Philippines from an intersectional perspective. Specifically, it considers the Reproductive Health (RH) Bill which was enacted in 2012 to unpack the various competing interests and identities of coalitions that are mobilised by sexual and reproductiv...

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