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Gender in International
Relations
Feminist Perspectives on Achieving Global
Security
J. Ann Tickner
New York
Columbia University Press
1992
Bibliographic Data
To Joan, Heather, and Wendy
--feminists for the future
Preface
1. Engendered Insecurities
2. Man, the State, and War: Gendered Perspectives on National Security
3. Three Models of Man: Gendered Perspectives on Global Economic
Security
4. Man over Nature: Gendered Perspectives on Ecological Security
5. Toward a Nongendered Perspective on Global Security
Bibliography
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Gender in International Relations: Feminist Perspectives on Achieving Global Security, by J. Ann Tickner
Preface
As a scholar and teacher of international relations, I have frequently asked myself the following
questions: Why are there so few women in my discipline? If I teach the field as it is conventionally
defined, why are there so few readings by women to assign to my students? Why is the subject matter of
my discipline so distant from women's lived experiences? Why have women been conspicuous only by
their absence in the worlds of diplomacy and military and foreign policy-making?
I began to think about writing this book as an attempt to answer these questions. Having spent my
childhood in London during World War II and my adolescence in New York as part of a United Nations'
family, international affairs were an important part of my early life. But, as one of only three female
graduate students in my year in Yale University's International Relations Program in the early 1960s, I
began to notice that the academic discipline that I had chosen, in part because of these formative
experiences, was not one that attracted many women. Admittedly, when I returned to graduate studies in
the 1970s, the number of women entering the field had grown: while I felt less isolated, I observed that
women scholars and teachers of international relations were clustered in areas such as international
political economy, development studies, and international political theory. I still wondered why so few
women chose national and international security studies, the privileged core of the field.
My own research has been in areas such as Third World development, North-South relations, and peace
studies-- areas that were far from the mainstream of international politics in the early 1980s when I began
my academic career. Like many women in international relations, I did not choose to specialize in
security-linked war and peace studies, usually associated with great power relations and power politics,
areas central to the subject matter of the classical discipline.
As a teacher of international relations, however, I have, of necessity, familiarized myself with what some
in my field would call the "important" issues of war and peace, generally defined as national security
studies. But, as only one of three women out of a total of about sixty students who participated in a
course on nuclear strategy at M.I.T. in the early 1980s, my contention that this is an area of international
relations not heavily populated by women was strongly reinforced. Trying to familiarize myself with the
arcane and esoteric language of nuclear strategy, I remembered with some sympathy how, as an
undergraduate history major, I had avoided details of war-fighting strategies and weapons development.
Since I began teaching these issues myself, often using the same language that I found so alienating in
my own education, I have found that, while many of my male students seem quite comfortable with the
discourse of war and weaponry in my introductory course on international relations, a semester has never
passed without some of my female students expressing privately that they fear they will not do well in
this course because it does not seem to be "their subject." In trying to reassure these women that they can
be successful, I have often paused to reflect on whether this is "my subject." Frequently, I have been the
only woman on professional panels in my field, and I am disappointed that I cannot find more women
theorists of international relations to assign to my students. Just as the traditional subject matter of my
discipline has been constructed without reference to most of women's lived experiences, women have
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rarely been portrayed as actors on the stage of international politics.
Rather than discussing strategies for bringing more women into the international relations discipline as it
is conventionally defined, I shall seek answers to my questions by bringing to light what I believe to be
the masculinist underpinnings of the field. I shall also examine what the discipline might look like if the
central realities of women's day-to-day lives were included in its subject matter. Making women's
experiences visible allows us to see how gender relations have contributed to the way in which the field
of international relations is conventionally constructed and to reexamine the traditional boundaries of the
field. Drawing attention to gender hierarchies that privilege men's knowledge and men's experiences
permits us to see that it is these experiences that have formed the basis of most of our knowledge about
international politics. It is doubtful whether we can achieve a more peaceful and just world, a goal of
many scholars both women and men who write about international politics, while these gender
hierarchies remain in place.
Although this book is an attempt to make the discipline of international relations more relevant to
women's lives, I am not writing it only for women; I hope that its audience will include both women and
men who are seeking a more inclusive approach to the way we think about international politics. Women
have spoken and written on the margins of international relations because it is to the margins that their
experiences have been relegated. Not until international politics is an arena that values the lived
experiences of us all can we truly envisage a more comprehensive and egalitarian approach that, it is to
be hoped, could lead to a more peaceful world. Because gender hierarchies have contributed to the
perpetuation of global insecurities, all those concerned with international affairs-- men and women
alike-- should also be concerned with understanding and overcoming their effects.
I have attempted to present the material in this book in a way that is accessible to readers in both the
discipline of international relations and the discipline of feminist studies. Since I focus on the issue of
global security, the book should also be of interest to those in the peace studies field, as well as to a more
general audience seeking new ways to think about international politics. Trained in the discipline of
international relations, I began my own intellectual journey toward the feminist perspectives on
international relations I am presenting when I read Evelyn Fox Keller's Reflections on Gender and
Science. When I subsequently sat in on her course on gender and science at M.I.T. in 1986, my initial
thought that her feminist critique of the natural sciences could be applied to theories of international
relations was confirmed.
In June 1988 I was invited to participate in one of the first conferences on gender and international
relations held at the London School of Economics. In the spring of 1989 I was privileged to be able to
participate in the first graduate seminar on women and international relations in the Department of
International Relations at the L.S.E. During that time, my early thoughts on the subject benefited from
discussions with Fred Halliday, Kathleen Newland, and Rebecca Grant. With the support of a Batchelor
Ford Faculty Fellowship from Holy Cross College, I spent the remainder of that semester at the Center
for Women Scholars and Research on Women at Uppsala University. I am grateful to Mona Eliasson, the
director of the center, who provided support and encouragement during those early stages of this work.
Readers will recognize the influence of Scandinavian peace research in my multidimensional definition
of global security. Time spent at the Department of Peace and Conflict Research at Uppsala University
was important in helping me to think about how I could reconceptualize this definition of global security
using a feminist perspective. I am grateful to Peter Wallensteen and other members of that department
for their support and interest.
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On this side of the Atlantic, I am grateful to the women associated with the newly formed Feminist
Theory and Gender Studies section of the International Studies Association. Through participation on
panels at various I.S.A. meetings, as well as informal discussions with these women, many of my earlier
ideas on gender in international relations have been sharpened or revised. For their reading and
comments on particular portions of the book, I would like to thank Nazli Choucri, Irene Diamond, Jean
Elshtain, Cynthia Enloe, Peter Haas, Welling Hall, Craig Murphy, Susan Okin, Carole Pateman, Spike
Peterson, Anne Runyan, and Jutta Weldes. At Holy Cross College, I have appreciated the advice of my
colleagues Hilde Hein, Diane Bell, and the late Maurizio Vannicelli, whose support of and insightful
comments on all my work will be greatly missed in the future.
The final draft of this book was written during the academic year 1990-91 when I was a visiting research
scholar at the Wellesley College Center for Research on Women. I am grateful to Susan Bailey and Jan
Putnam as well as to other visiting scholars and members of the staff at the center for providing the
friendly and supportive atmosphere needed to finish this project. To Peggy McIntosh I owe a particular
debt of gratitude for her willingness to share many insights that have helped me to become a better
feminist. I am also grateful to Holy Cross College for providing the luxury of a sabbatical leave during
which this project was completed.
I should especially like to thank Robert Keohane whose initial encouragement and continued support
were important to me in deciding to undertake research in what is still a very new and relatively
uncharted approach to international relations. I also appreciated his thoughtful comments on this
manuscript. I am grateful to Kate Wittenberg, editor in chief at Columbia University Press, who has
contributed a great deal to the realization of this project from the start, and to Anne McCoy, managing
editor at the press. Helen Milner, coeditor of the press's series on New Directions in World Politics,
James Der Derian, and Mona Harrington offered thoughtful and useful suggestions on the manuscript.
Finally, to my husband, Hayward Alker, I owe a special word of appreciation. While he has always been
a source of support for my professional endeavors, I have also benefited enormously from his comments
on the entire manuscript.
Gender in International Relations
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Gender in International Relations: Feminist Perspectives on Achieving Global Security, by J. Ann Tickner
1. Engendered Insecurities: Feminist
Perspectives on International Relations
Too often the great decisions are originated and given form in bodies made up
wholly of men, or so completely dominated by them that whatever of special value
women have to offer is shunted aside without expression. Eleanor Roosevelt
Representation of the world, like the world itself, is the work of men; they describe it
from their own point of view, which they confuse with absolute truth.
Simone de Beauvoir *
As Eleanor Roosevelt and countless others have observed, international politics is a man's world. It is a
world inhabited by diplomats, soldiers, and international civil servants most of whom are men. Apart
from the occasional head of state, there is little evidence to suggest that women have played much of a
role in shaping foreign policy in any country in the twentieth century. In the United States in 1987,
women constituted less than 5 percent of the senior Foreign Service ranks, and in the same year, less than
4 percent of the executive positions in the Department of Defense were held by women. 1 Although it is
true that women are underrepresented in all top-level government positions in the United States and
elsewhere, they encounter additional difficulties in positions having to do with international politics. The
following stories can help us to understand why.
Before the superpower summit in Geneva in 1985, Donald Regan, then White House chief of staff, told a
Washington Post reporter that women would not understand the issues at stake at that meeting. As
reported in the Boston Globe of October 10, 1985, Regan claimed that women are "not... going to
understand [missile] throw-weights or what is happening in Afghanistan or what is happening in human
rights. ... Some women will, but most women... would rather read the human interest stuff of what
happened." Protesting Regan's remarks, feminists cited women's prominent roles in the various peace
movements of the twentieth century as evidence of their competency in international affairs. 2
When Bella Abzug entered the House of Representatives in 1972, she claimed that ending the war in
Vietnam was the most important item on the congressional agenda and the one on which she most
wanted to work as the representative of the many women and men in her district who opposed the war.
With this goal in mind, Abzug requested a seat on the House Armed Services Committee, a committee
on which, in 1972, no woman had served in the past twenty-two years. Abzug's request was denied by
members of the House leadership, one of whom suggested that the Agriculture Committee would be
more appropriate. In her account of this incident, Abzug notes that, of the twelve women in the House of
Representatives in 1972, five were assigned to the Education and Labor Committee, evidence that
suggests that women in politics are channeled into certain arenas of public policy that are perceived as
"women's issues." 3
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More recently, a picture of Congresswoman Patricia Schroeder crying on her husband's shoulder, which
appeared on the front page of several major American newspapers after she withdrew from the
presidential primary campaign in September 1987, stimulated subsequent discussion about her suitability
as a presidential candidate. The discussion revealed that, even though Schroeder is one of the very few
women who has served on the House Armed Services Committee, many people in the United States had
strong misgivings over the thought of an emotional woman with her finger on the nuclear button. 4
Each of these stories reinforces the belief, widely held in the United States and throughout the world by
both men and women, that military and foreign policy are arenas of policy-making least appropriate for
women. Strength, power, autonomy, independence, and rationality, all typically associated with men and
masculinity, are characteristics we most value in those to whom we entrust the conduct of our foreign
policy and the defense of our national interest. Those women in the peace movements, whom feminist
critics of Donald Regan cited as evidence for women's involvement in international affairs, are frequently
branded as naive, weak, and even unpatriotic. When we think about the definition of a patriot, we
generally think of a man, often a soldier who defends his homeland, most especially his women and
children, from dangerous outsiders. (We sometimes even think of a missile or a football team.) The
Schroeder story suggests that even women who have experience in foreign policy issues are perceived as
being too emotional and too weak for the tough life-and-death decisions required for the nation's defense.
Weakness is always considered a danger when issues of national security are at stake: the president's dual
role as commander in chief reinforces our belief that qualities we associate with "manliness" are of
utmost importance in the selection of our presidents.
The few women who do make it into the foreign policy establishment often suffer from this negative
perception: Jeane Kirkpatrick is one such example. Attracted by her authoritative and forceful public
style and strong anticommunist rhetoric, Ronald Reagan appointed Kirkpatrick as ambassador to the
United Nations in 1981. Yet in spite of the visibility she achieved due to her strong stance against
anti-American voices at the United Nations, Kirkpatrick complained of not being taken seriously by her
peers both in the United Nations and in the U.S. foreign policy establishment. Although other American
ambassadors to the United Nations have also complained that they lack influence over U.S. foreign
policy-making, Kirkpatrick specifically attributed this lack of respect to her sex: describing herself to one
reporter as a "mouse in a man's world," Kirkpatrick claimed that her views were seldom listened to and
that she failed to have any effect whatsoever on the course of American foreign policy. 5
The experiences of Abzug, Schroeder, and Kirkpatrick-- women with very different political perspectives
(two liberal Democrats and one conservative Republican)-- are examples of the difficulties that women
face when they try to enter the elite world of foreign policy decision-making. In this book, however, I do
not intend to focus on strategies to increase the number of women in high foreign policy positions. I
believe that these gender-related difficulties are symptomatic of a much deeper issue that I do wish to
address: the extent to which international politics is such a thoroughly masculinized sphere of activity
that women's voices are considered inauthentic. Therefore my attempt is to step back from the
experiences of the few women who have tried to operate in the world of international politics, sometimes
even successfully, and to examine how this world is constructed. By analyzing some of the writings of
those who have tried to describe, explain, and prescribe for the behavior of states in the international
system, we can begin to understand some of the deeper reasons for women's pervasive exclusion from
foreign policy-making-- for it is in the way that we are taught to think about international politics that the
attitudes I have described are shaped.
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With its focus on the "high" politics of war and Realpolitik, the traditional Western academic discipline
of international relations privileges issues that grow out of men's experiences; we are socialized into
believing that war and power politics are spheres of activity with which men have a special affinity and
that their voices in describing and prescribing for this world are therefore likely to be more authentic.
The roles traditionally ascribed to women-- in reproduction, in households, and even in the economy--
are generally considered irrelevant to the traditional construction of the field. Ignoring women's
experiences contributes not only to their exclusion but also to a process of self-selection that results in an
overwhelmingly male population both in the foreign policy world and in the academic field of
international relations. This selection process begins with the way we are taught to think about world
politics; if women's experiences were to be included, a radical redefinition of the field would have to take
place.
The purpose of this book is to begin to think about how the discipline of international relations might
look if gender were included as a category of analysis and if women's experiences were part of the
subject matter out of which its theories are constructed. Until gender hierarchies are eliminated,
hierarchies that privilege male characteristics and men's knowledge and experiences, and sustain the kind
of attitudes toward women in foreign policy that I have described, I do not believe that the
marginalization of women in matters related to international politics is likely to change.
Gender in International Relations
While the purpose of this book is to introduce gender as a category of analysis into the discipline of
international relations, the marginalization of women in the arena of foreign policy-making through the
kind of gender stereotyping that I have described suggests that international politics has always been a
gendered activity in the modern state system. Since foreign and military policy-making has been largely
conducted by men, the discipline that analyzes these activities is bound to be primarily about men and
masculinity. We seldom realize we think in these terms, however; in most fields of knowledge we have
become accustomed to equating what is human with what is masculine. Nowhere is this more true than in
international relations, a discipline that, while it has for the most part resisted the introduction of gender
into its discourse, bases its assumptions and explanations almost entirely on the activities and
experiences of men. Any attempt to introduce a more explicitly gendered analysis into the field must
therefore begin with a discussion of masculinity.
Masculinity and politics have a long and close association. Characteristics associated with "manliness,"
such as toughness, courage, power, independence, and even physical strength, have, throughout history,
been those most valued in the conduct of politics, particularly international politics. Frequently,
manliness has also been associated with violence and the use of force, a type of behavior that, when
conducted in the international arena, has been valorized and applauded in the name of defending one's
country.
This celebration of male power, particularly the glorification of the male warrior, produces more of a
gender dichotomy than exists in reality for, as R. W. Connell points out, this stereotypical image of
masculinity does not fit most men. Connell suggests that what he calls "hegemonic masculinity," a type
of culturally dominant masculinity that he distinguishes from other subordinated masculinities, is a
socially constructed cultural ideal that, while it does not correspond to the actual personality of the
majority of men, sustains patriarchal authority and legitimizes a patriarchal political and social order. 6
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Hegemonic masculinity is sustained through its opposition to various subordinated and devalued
masculinities, such as homosexuality, and, more important, through its relation to various devalued
femininities. Socially constructed gender differences are based on socially sanctioned, unequal
relationships between men and women that reinforce compliance with men's stated superiority. Nowhere
in the public realm are these stereotypical gender images more apparent than in the realm of international
politics, where the characteristics associated with hegemonic masculinity are projected onto the behavior
of states whose success as international actors is measured in terms of their power capabilities and
capacity for self-help and autonomy.
Connell's definition of hegemonic masculinity depends on its opposition to and unequal relationship with
various subordinated femininities. Many contemporary feminists draw on similarly socially constructed,
or engendered, relationships in their definition of gender difference. Historically, differences between
men and women have usually been ascribed to biology. But when feminists use the term gender today,
they are not generally referring to biological differences between males and females, but to a set of
culturally shaped and defined characteristics associated with masculinity and femininity. These
characteristics can and do vary across time and place. In this view, biology may constrain behavior, but it
should not be used "deterministically" or "naturally" to justify practices, institutions, or choices that
could be other than they are. While what it means to be a man or a woman varies across cultures and
history, in most cultures gender differences signify relationships of inequality and the domination of
women by men.
Joan Scott similarly characterizes gender as "a constitutive element of social relationships based on
perceived differences between the sexes, and... a primary way of signifying relationships of power." 7
Indeed one could characterize most contemporary feminist scholarship in terms of the dual beliefs that
gender difference has played an important and essential role in the structuring of social inequalities in
much of human history and that the resulting differences in self-identifications, human understandings,
social status, and power relationships are unjustified.
Scott claims that the way in which our understanding of gender signifies relationships of power is
through a set of normative concepts that set forth interpretations of the meanings of symbols. In Western
culture, these concepts take the form of fixed binary oppositions that categorically assert the meaning of
masculine and feminine and hence legitimize a set of unequal social relationships. 8 Scott and many other
contemporary feminists assert that, through our use of language, we come to perceive the world through
these binary oppositions. Our Western understanding of gender is based on a set of culturally determined
binary distinctions, such as public versus private, objective versus subjective, self versus other, reason
versus emotion, autonomy versus relatedness, and culture versus nature; the first of each pair of
characteristics is typically associated with masculinity, the second with femininity. 9 Scott claims that the
hierarchical construction of these distinctions can take on a fixed and permanent quality that perpetuates
women's oppression: therefore they must be challenged. To do so we must analyze the way these binary
oppositions operate in different contexts and, rather than accepting them as fixed, seek to displace their
hierarchical construction. 10 When many of these differences between women and men are no longer
assumed to be natural or fixed, we can examine how relations of gender inequality are constructed and
sustained in various arenas of public and private life. In committing itself to gender as a category of
analysis, contemporary feminism also commits itself to gender equality as a social goal.
Extending Scott's challenge to the field of international relations, we can immediately detect a similar set
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of hierarchical binary oppositions. But in spite of the seemingly obvious association of international
politics with the masculine characteristics described above, the field of international relations is one of
the last of the social sciences to be touched by gender analysis and feminist perspectives. 11 The reason
for this, I believe, is not that the field is gender neutral, meaning that the introduction of gender is
irrelevant to its subject matter as many scholars believe, but that it is so thoroughly masculinized that the
workings of these hierarchical gender relations are hidden.
Framed in its own set of binary distinctions, the discipline of international relations assumes similarly
hierarchical relationships when it posits an anarchic world "outside" to be defended against through the
accumulation and rational use of power. In political discourse, this becomes translated into stereotypical
notions about those who inhabit the outside. Like women, foreigners are frequently portrayed as "the
other": nonwhites and tropical countries are often depicted as irrational, emotional, and unstable,
characteristics that are also attributed to women. The construction of this discourse and the way in which
we are taught to think about international politics closely parallel the way in which we are socialized into
understanding gender differences. To ignore these hierarchical constructions and their relevance to power
is therefore to risk perpetuating these relationships of domination and subordination. But before
beginning to describe what the field of international relations might look like if gender were included as
a central category of analysis, I shall give a brief historical overview of the field as it has traditionally
been constructed.
International Relations Theory in the Cold War Era
Realism
Writing on the eve of the Second World War, historian E. H. Carr claimed that it was the devastating
events of World War I that motivated the founding of the discipline of international relations. Before
1914 international relations had been largely the concern of professional practitioners. But the enormous
destruction caused by World War I, and the search for new methods to prevent its happening again,
brought demands for the democratization of both the theory and practice of international relations. 12
According to Carr, the initial course of this new academic discipline was marked by a passionate desire
to prevent another war. In the interwar period, it focused on international law and collective security,
epitomized in the League of Nations, as mechanisms with which to prevent future conflicts. But when the
limitations of the League and its collective security system were seen as contributing to the outbreak of
World War II, the discipline turned to what its proponents have labeled political realism.
Thus the discipline of international relations began as a field that was concerned with breaking the
seemingly inevitable cycle of international war. But when a war of even greater devastation broke out in
1939, the disillusionment with what was seen as mistaken idealism, embodied in pacifist policies of
democratic states in the 1930s, moved certain scholars toward what they termed a more "realistic"
approach to international politics. Realist scholars and practitioners such as George Kennan and Henry
Kissinger, noting the dangers of popular passions and the influence of uninformed citizens on foreign
policy, argued for the conduct of foreign affairs by detached "objective" elites insulated from the dangers
of the moralism and legalism that had had such detrimental effects on earlier American foreign policy. 13
Realists claimed that conflict was inevitable: the best way to assure the security of states is therefore to
prepare for war.
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While most contemporary scholars of international relations have drawn on the historical writings of the
classical Greeks as well as on those of early modern Western political theorists such as Machiavelli,
Hobbes, and Rousseau, the central concern of realism, the dominant paradigm in international relations
since 1945, has been with issues of war and national security in the post-World War II international
system. 14 Profoundly influenced by events in Europe in the 1930s and 1940s whence many of its early
scholars came, political realism has been primarily concerned with explaining the causes of international
wars and the rise and fall of states. Generally Anglo-American in their orientation, realists, described by
one author as the "fathers of the classical tradition," 15 have concentrated their investigations on the
power-balancing activities of the great powers.
Reacting against the failure of what they have termed the "idealist" tradition of the early twentieth
century, realists take as their basic assumption a dangerous world devoid of an overarching authority to
keep the peace. In this "anarchical" world, realists prescribe the accumulation of power and military
strength to assure state survival, the protection of an orderly "domestic" space, and the pursuit of
legitimate national interests beyond one's territorial boundaries. The state of Cold War in the latter half of
the twentieth century led many of these scholars to focus on Soviet-American relations and military arms
races and ensured the predominance of realist explanations of and prescriptions for state behavior in the
international system.
Since many of the early writers in the classical realist tradition were European men whose lives had been
disrupted by the ideologies of totalitarian regimes of the 1930s, realism strove for an objectivist
methodology that, by discovering generalizable laws, could offer universalistic explanations for the
behavior of states across time and space. Claiming that ideology was a cloak for the operation of
Realpolitik, the goal was to be able to exercise more control over an unpredictable international
environment. For realists, morality is problematic in the tough world of international politics; in fact the
exercise of moral restraint, epitomized by the policies of British prime minister Neville Chamberlain in
the interwar period, can be a prescription for disaster. In the United States in the 1960s, however,
classical realism came under attack, not so much for its basic assumptions and goals but for its
methodology, which critics faulted for failing to live up to the standards of a positivist science. These
early critics of realism noted its imprecision and lack of scientific rigor. In an attempt to make the
methodology of international relations more rigorous and inject a greater precision into the field, critics
of classical realism advocated the collection and analysis of data relating to wars and other international
transactions. 16
Answering these critics, neorealists have attempted to develop a positivist methodology with which to
build a truly objective "science" of international relations. Neorealists have used models from economics,
biology, and physics, which they claim can offer universal explanations for the behavior of states in the
international system. 17 The depersonalization of the discipline, which results when methodologies are
borrowed from the natural sciences and statistics, has been carried to its extreme in national security
studies, a subfield that has sought, through the use of operations research and game theoretic models, to
analyze strategies for nuclear deterrence and nuclear war-fighting "rationally." 18
The Challenge to Realism
The promise of constructing a grand theory of international relations proved illusory. Knowledge
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construction in the discipline has generally been driven by real world events, and realism appeared best
to describe the political behavior of the great powers during periods of high political tension. In the early
1970s, realism was severely challenged at a time when the declining intensity of the Cold War and a
dramatic rise in oil prices catapulted issues other than war and peace and Soviet-American relations to
the top of the foreign policy agenda. The perceived challenge to national security, mounted by the action
of the OPEC cartel, prompted some scholars to suggest that international relations must pay more
attention to issues associated with economic interdependence and to activities of nonstate actors. This
"interdependence" school also challenged realism's exclusive focus on political conflict and power
politics in the international system by calling attention to relations between states, such as the United
States and Canada or Western Europe, where war was not expected. Interdependence scholars claimed
that the traditional approach was particularly unsuitable for explaining economic conflicts between
advanced capitalist states. 19
A more fundamental challenge to realism came from scholars influenced by the Marxist tradition.
Motivated by a different agenda, one that emphasizes issues of equality and justice rather than issues of
order and control, scholars using a variety of more radical approaches attempted to move the field away
from its excessively Western focus toward a consideration of those marginalized areas of the world
system that had been subject to Western colonization. When it became evident, in the 1970s, that
promises of prosperity and the elimination of poverty in these newly independent states were not being
fulfilled, these scholars turned their attention to the world economy, the workings of which, they
believed, served to perpetuate the unevenness of development between and within states. Many of them
claimed that a structural condition known as dependency locked these states on the peripheries of the
world system into a detrimental relationship with the centers of political and economic power, denying
them the possibility of autonomous development. 20 Marxists emphasized class divisions that exist in,
and derive from, the world market and that cut across state boundaries. Peace researchers began to use
the term structural violence to denote a condition whereby those on the margins of the international
system were condemned to a shorter life expectancy through the uneven allocation of the resources of
global capitalism. 21
The introduction of competing theories and approaches and the injection of these new issues and actors
into the subject matter of international relations were accompanied by a shift to a more normative
approach to the field. For example, the world order perspective asked how humanity could significantly
reduce the likelihood of international violence and create minimally acceptable conditions of worldwide
economic well-being, social justice, ecological stability, and democratic participation in decision-making
processes. 22 World order scholars questioned whether the state was an adequate instrument for solving
the multiplicity of problems on the international agenda. Militarized states can be a threat to the security
of their own populations; economic inequality, poverty, and constraints on resources were seen as the
results of the workings of global capitalism and thus beyond the control of individual states. State
boundaries cannot be protected against environmental pollution, an issue that can be addressed only by
international collective action. World order scholars rejected realist claims of objectivity and positivist
conceptions in the international relations discipline; adopting a specifically normative stance, they have
postulated possible alternate futures that could offer the promise of equality and justice and investigated
how these alternative futures could be achieved. 23
In realism's subject matter, as well as in its quest for a scientific methodology, we can detect an
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orientation that corresponds to some of the masculine-linked characteristics I described above, such as
the emphasis on power and autonomy and claims to objectivity and rationality. But among realism's
critics, virtually no attention has been given to gender as a category of analysis. Scholars concerned with
structural violence have paid little attention to how women are affected by global politics or the workings
of the world economy, nor to the fact that hierarchical gender relations are interrelated with other forms
of domination that they do address. 24 In developing a perspective on international relations that does
address the effects of these gender hierarchies, I shall therefore be drawing on feminist theories from
other disciplines to see how they can contribute to our understanding of gender in international relations.
Contemporary Feminist Theories
Just as there are multiple approaches within the discipline of international relations, there are also
multiple approaches in contemporary feminist theory that come out of various disciplinary traditions and
paradigms. While it is obvious that not all women are feminists, feminist theories are constructed out of
the experiences of women in their many and varied circumstances, experiences that have generally been
rendered invisible by most intellectual disciplines.
Most contemporary feminist perspectives define themselves in terms of reacting to traditional liberal
feminism that, since its classic formulation in the works of Mary Wollstonecraft and John Stuart Mill,
has sought to draw attention to and eliminate the legal restraints barring women's access to full
participation in the public world. 25 Most contemporary feminist scholars, other than liberals, claim that
the sources of discrimination against women run much deeper than legal restraints: they are enmeshed in
the economic, cultural, and social structures of society and thus do not end when legal restraints are
removed. Almost all feminist perspectives have been motivated by the common goal of attempting to
describe and explain the sources of gender inequality, and hence women's oppression, and to seek
strategies to end them.
Feminists claim that women are oppressed in a multiplicity of ways that depend on culture, class, and
race as well as on gender. Rosemary Tong suggests that we can categorize various contemporary feminist
theories according to the ways in which they view the causes of women's oppression. While Marxist
feminists believe that capitalism is the source of women's oppression, radical feminists claim that women
are oppressed by the system of patriarchy that has existed under almost all modes of production.
Patriarchy is institutionalized through legal and economic, as well as social and cultural institutions.
Some radical feminists argue that the low value assigned to the feminine characteristics described above
also contributes to women's oppression. Feminists in the psychoanalytic tradition look for the source of
women's oppression deep in the psyche, in gender relationships into which we are socialized from birth.
Socialist feminists have tried to weave these various approaches together into some kind of a
comprehensive explanation of women's oppression. Socialist feminists claim that women's position in
society is determined both by structures of production in the economy and by structures of reproduction
in the household, structures that are reinforced by the early socialization of children into gender roles.
Women's unequal status in all these structures must be eliminated for full equality to be achieved.
Socialist feminism thus tries to understand the position of women in their multiple roles in order to find a
single standpoint from which to explain their condition. Using standpoint in the sense that it has been
used by Marxists, these theorists claim that those who are oppressed have a better understanding of the
sources of their oppression than their oppressors. "A standpoint is an engaged vision of the world
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opposed and superior to dominant ways of thinking." 26
This notion of standpoint has been seriously criticized by postmodern feminists who argue that a unified
representation of women across class, racial, and cultural lines is an impossibility. Just as feminists more
generally have criticized existing knowledge that is grounded in the experiences of white Western males,
postmodernists claim that feminists themselves are in danger of essentializing the meaning of woman
when they draw exclusively on the experiences of white Western women: such an approach runs the
additional risk of reproducing the same dualizing distinctions that feminists object to in patriarchal
discourse. 27 Postmodernists believe that a multiplicity of women's voices must be heard lest feminism
itself become one more hierarchical system of knowledge construction.
Any attempt to construct feminist perspectives on international relations must take this concern of
postmodernists seriously; as described above, dominant approaches to international relations have been
Western-centered and have focused their theoretical investigations on the activities of the great powers.
An important goal for many feminists has been to attempt to speak for the marginalized and oppressed:
much of contemporary feminism has also recognized the need to be sensitive to the multiple voices of
women and the variety of circumstances out of which they speak. Developing perspectives that can shed
light on gender hierarchies as they contribute to women's oppression worldwide must therefore be
sensitive to the dangers of constructing a Western-centered approach. Many Western feminists are
understandably apprehensive about replicating men's knowledge by generalizing from the experiences of
white Western women. Yet to be unable to speak for women only further reinforces the voices of those
who have constructed approaches to international relations out of the experiences of men.
"[Feminists] need a home in which everyone has a room of her own, but one in which the walls are thin
enough to permit a conversation." 28 Nowhere is this more true than in these early attempts to bring
feminist perspectives to bear on international politics, a realm that has been divisive in both its theory
and its practice. Having presented multiparadigmatic, multiperspective descriptions of both disciplines, I
shall be drawing on and synthesizing a variety of feminist perspectives as I seek to develop a gendered
analysis of some of the major approaches to international relations.
Feminist Theories and International Relations
Since, as I have suggested, the world of international politics is a masculine domain, how could feminist
perspectives contribute anything new to its academic discourses? Many male scholars have already noted
that, given our current technologies of destruction and the high degree of economic inequality and
environmental degradation that now exists, we are desperately in need of changes in the way world
politics is conducted; many of them are attempting to prescribe such changes. For the most part,
however, these critics have ignored the extent to which the values and assumptions that drive our
contemporary international system are intrinsically related to concepts of masculinity; privileging these
values constrains the options available to states and their policymakers. All knowledge is partial and is a
function of the knower's lived experience in the world. Since knowledge about the behavior of states in
the international system depends on assumptions that come out of men's experiences, it ignores a large
body of human experience that has the potential for increasing the range of options and opening up new
ways of thinking about interstate practices. Theoretical perspectives that depend on a broader range of
human experience are important for women and men alike, as we seek new ways of thinking about our
contemporary dilemmas.
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Conventional international relations theory has concentrated on the activities of the great powers at the
center of the system. Feminist theories, which speak out of the various experiences of women-- who are
usually on the margins of society and interstate politics-- can offer us some new insights on the behavior
of states and the needs of individuals, particularly those on the peripheries of the international system.
Feminist perspectives, constructed out of the experiences of women, can add a new dimension to our
understanding of the world economy; since women are frequently the first casualties in times of
economic hardship, we might also gain some new insight into the relationship between militarism and
structural violence.
However, feminist theories must go beyond injecting women's experiences into different disciplines and
attempt to challenge the core concepts of the disciplines themselves. Concepts central to international
relations theory and practice, such as power, sovereignty, and security, have been framed in terms that
we associate with masculinity. Drawing on feminist theories to examine and critique the meaning of
these and other concepts fundamental to international politics could help us to reformulate these concepts
in ways that might allow us to see new possibilities for solving our current insecurities. Suggesting that
the personal is political, feminist scholars have brought to our attention distinctions between public and
private in the domestic polity: examining these artificial boundary distinctions in the domestic polity
could shed new light on international boundaries, such as those between anarchy and order, which are so
fundamental to the conceptual framework of realist discourse.
Most contemporary feminist perspectives take the gender inequalities that I have described above as a
basic assumption. Feminists in various disciplines claim that feminist theories, by revealing and
challenging these gender hierarchies, have the potential to transform disciplinary paradigms. By
introducing gender into the discipline of international relations, I hope to challenge the way in which the
field has traditionally been constructed and to examine the extent to which the practices of international
politics are related to these gender inequalities. The construction of hierarchical binary oppositions has
been central to theorizing about international relations. 29 Distinctions between domestic and foreign,
inside and outside, order and anarchy, and center and periphery have served as important assumptions in
theory construction and as organizing principles for the way we view the world. Just as realists center
their explanations on the hierarchical relations between states and Marxists on unequal class relations,
feminists can bring to light gender hierarchies embedded in the theories and practices of world politics
and allow us to see the extent to which all these systems of domination are interrelated.
As Sarah Brown argues, a feminist theory of international relations is an act of political commitment to
understanding the world from the perspective of the socially subjugated. "There is the need to identify
the as yet unspecified relation between the construction of power and the construction of gender in
international relations." 30 Acknowledging, as most feminist theories do, that these hierarchies are
socially constructed, also allows us to envisage conditions necessary for their transcendence.
Feminist Perspectives on International Relations in the Contemporary
World
The dramatic events of the late 1980s and early 1990s brought to light many of the shortcomings in
realist explanations noted by critics for some time. Whereas the world wars of the first half of the
twentieth century involved the transgression of great powers across international boundaries, most of the
conflicts of the second half have taken place inside or across the boundaries of weak states. Although
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they have frequently involved at least one of the great powers, many of these conflicts have not been
fought to protect international boundaries but over ethnic or religious issues, or issues of national identity
and national liberation. The militarization of the South, with weapons sold or given by the North, has
resulted in a situation whereby the state is often perceived, not as a protector against outside dangers, but
as the ultimate threat to the security of its civilian population. The precarious armed peace that
characterized the relationship between the two superpowers during the Cold War owed whatever stability
it achieved not to military strength but to the threat of nuclear obliteration of winners and losers alike:
nuclear weapons and other modern military technologies continue to pose the threat of mass destruction.
These new threats to security demand new solutions quite at odds with the power politics prescriptions of
traditional international relations theory. As we face the prospect that, by the year 2000, 80 percent of the
world's population will live in the South, we in the West can no longer afford to privilege a tradition of
scholarship that focuses on the concerns and ambitions of the great powers. Faced with a stubborn gap in
living standards between the rich and the poor that some observers doubt can ever be overcome, realist
prescriptions of self-help are inappropriate; the health of the global economy depends on the health of all
its members. Environmental degradation, a relatively new item on the agenda of international relations,
threatens rich and poor alike and appears intransigent to state-centered solutions. Along with the
traditional issues of war and peace, the discipline of international relations is increasingly challenged by
the necessity of analyzing the realities of economic and ecological interdependence and finding ways of
mitigating their negative consequences. We must also face the reality of how easily these wider security
issues, which threaten the survival of the earth and all its inhabitants, disappear from the agenda when
military crises escalate.
Faced with a world turned upside down, the conventional discipline of international relations has recently
been undergoing a more fundamental challenge to its theoretical underpinnings. Certain scholars are now
engaged in a "third debate" that questions the empirical and positivist foundations of the field. 31
Postpositivist approaches question what they claim are realism's ahistorical attempts to posit universal
truths about the international system and the behavior of its member states. Like many contemporary
feminists, these scholars argue that all knowledge is socially constructed and is grounded in the time,
place, and social context of the investigator. Focusing on the use of language, many of these writers
claim that our knowledge about the international system comes to us from accounts written by those in a
position of power who use their knowledge for purposes of control and furthering their own interests. 32
These scholars assert that, while realism presents itself as an objective account of reality that claims to
explain the workings of the prevailing international order, it is also an ideology that has served to
legitimize and sustain that order. 33 While many of the previous challengers of realism, discussed above,
still spoke in terms of large depersonalized structures-- such as the international system of states or the
capitalist world economy-- many of these poststructuralist writers attempt to speak for disempowered
individuals on the margins of the international system. Besides questioning the ability of the state or
global capitalism to solve contemporary problems, they pose more fundamental questions about the
construction of the state as a political space and a source of identity.
These contemporary critiques bring the international relations discourse closer to some of the feminist
perspectives that I have described above: yet issues of gender have been raised only marginally. In
subsequent chapters, I shall insert gender more centrally into these disciplinary debates. I shall examine
some of the theoretical approaches introduced in this chapter to see to what extent their assumptions and
explanations depend on historical understandings of masculinity and femininity and the experiences of
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men. I shall then ask how, if these gender hierarchies were made explicit and the experiences of women
included, this would challenge the theoretical frameworks of these various approaches. I shall also
examine what effect feminist perspectives would have on the way the field and its central concepts have
been defined.
The following three chapters will focus on three topics: national security, political economy, and the
natural environment. Besides being central to the contemporary agenda of international relations
scholarship, these topics constitute the framework within which an important redefinition of the meaning
of security is currently taking place. The achievement of security has always been central to the
normative concerns of international relations scholars. But dissatisfied with the traditional models of
national security, which focus exclusively on military security, certain scholars of international relations
have begun to use the term common security to envisage a type of security that is global and
multidimensional with political, economic, and ecological facets that are as important as its military
dimensions. The security of individuals and their natural environment are considered as well as the
security of the state. Certain peace researchers are beginning to define security in terms of the
elimination of physical, structural, and ecological violence. 34 Moving the consideration of violence
beyond its relation to physical violence allows us to move beyond simplistic dichotomies between war
and peace to a consideration of the conditions necessary for a just peace, defined more broadly than
simply the absence of war.
Defining security in terms of the elimination of physical, structural, and ecological violence is quite
compatible with feminist theories that have long been concerned with all these issues. 35 Thinking of
security in multidimensional terms allows us to get away from prioritizing military issues, issues that
have been central to the agenda of traditional international relations but that are the furthest removed
from women's experiences. Many of the values promoted by supporters of common security are similar
to the characteristics that, in our culture, are associated with femininity. Yet, none of this new thinking
has considered security from a gendered perspective. Any feminist perspective would argue that a truly
comprehensive security cannot be achieved until gender relations of domination and subordination are
eliminated.
I shall begin my investigation of gendered perspectives on global security in chapter 2 with an
examination of the concept of national security, the way in which security has traditionally been defined
in international relations. I shall examine realism, the approach that has been primarily concerned with
issues of national security. I shall analyze the extent to which realist assumptions about the international
system and the states that compose it rely on the experiences of men and privilege values that we have
come to associate with masculinity. If we were to include women's experiences in our assumptions about
the security-seeking behavior of states, how would it change the way in which we think about national
security? Given the sexual division of labor, men's association with violence has been legitimated
through war and the instruments of the state. Feminist perspectives must introduce the issue of domestic
violence and analyze how the boundaries between public and private, domestic and international,
political and economic, are permeable and interrelated.
In chapter 3, I shall discuss the three dominant approaches to international political economy--
liberalism, economic nationalism, and Marxism-- and ask how the introduction of gender would affect
the assumptions, explanations, and predictions of these three paradigms. Just as Marxists have argued
that the workings of the world economy cannot be understood without reference to class, feminists make
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a similar claim with reference to gender. I shall examine the individual, the state, and class-- the central
units of analysis for liberalism, economic nationalism, and Marxism, respectively-- to see whether these
units of analysis evidence a masculinist orientation in the way they are described and in the interests they
represent. I shall suggest that constructing perspectives on international political economy that include
the insights of feminist theories and the economic activities of women could give us a different
perspective on the workings of the world economy and the achievement of economic security for women
and men alike.
In chapter 4, I shall explore some of the writings on the natural environment, the most recent issue on the
agenda of the discipline of international relations. I shall trace the foundations of this newly emerging
field of ecopolitics back to the nineteenth-century tradition of geopolitics. I shall argue that both this
earlier tradition of geopolitics and most of the contemporary work on ecopolitics are masculine in their
orientation, with common roots in an Enlightenment science whose goal was the domination of nature.
Drawing on the work of ecofeminists, I shall then construct a feminist perspective on ecology that, I will
argue, is more inclusive and egalitarian and that therefore offers more promise for the achievement of
ecological security.
As Sarah Brown suggests, a genuinely emancipatory feminist international relations will take gender
difference as its starting point but it will not take it as given. While attempting to explain how gender has
been constructed and maintained in international relations, we must also see how it can be removed. 36 A
world that is more secure for us all cannot be achieved until the oppressive gender hierarchies that
operate to frame the way in which we think about and engage in international politics are dismantled. In
my final chapter I shall argue that the feminist perspectives on international relations that I develop
throughout the book are but an intermediate step toward the eventual goal of a nongendered perspective.
I shall also argue that this nongendered perspective could truly offer us a more inclusively human way of
thinking about our collective future, a future in which women and men could share equally in the
construction of a safer and more just world.
*: Roosevelt epigraph from speech to the United Nations General Assembly (1952), quoted in Crapol,
ed., Women and American Foreign Policy, p. 176; de Beauvoir epigraph from The Second Sex, p. 161.
Back.
Note 1: McGlen and Sarkees, "Leadership Styles of Women in Foreign Policy," p. 17. Back.
Note 2: While Regan's remarks sparked protest at the time, the fact that he could make such comments
with relatively little political damage is instructive. Gender stereotyping of the sort that diminishes
women remains relatively uncontested in political discourse. Similar comments about minorities or
ethnic groups would probably do more damage to politicians' careers. Back.
Note 3: Abzug, "Bella Abzug Enters the House of Representatives," in Barber and Kellerman, eds.,
Women Leaders in American Politics, p. 279. Back.
Note 4: Boston Globe, September 29, 1987, p. 1. Back.
Note 5: Crapol, ed., Women and American Foreign Policy, p. 167. Back.
Note 6: Connell, Gender and Power, ch. Characteristics that Connell associates with hegemonic
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masculinity are also found in some women. The example of former British prime minister Margaret
Thatcher would be relevant here; her "macho" qualities during the Falklands/Malvinas war of 1982
reinforced her legitimacy as prime minister and increased her popularity with the British electorate.
Back.
Note 7: Scott, Gender and the Politics of History, p. Scott's chapter 2, entitled "Gender: A Useful
Category of Historical Analysis," on which my analysis of gender draws, was originally published in the
American Historical Review (December 1986), 91(5):1053-1075. Back.
Note 8: Ibid., p. 43. Back.
Note 9: Broverman et al., "Sex-Role Stereotypes: A Current Appraisal." Although the original study was
published in 1972, replication of this research in the 1980s confirmed that these perceptions still held in
the United States. Back.
Note 10: Scott, Gender and the Politics of History, p. 43. Back.
Note 11: As of 1986, a study showed that no major American international relations journal had
published any articles that used gender as a category of analysis. See Steuernagel and Quinn, "Is Anyone
Listening?" Apart from a special issue of the British international relations journal Millennium (Winter
1988), 17(3), on women and international relations, very little attention has been paid to gender in any
major international relations journal. Back.
Note 12: Carr, The Twenty Years' Crisis, chs. 1 and 2. Back.
Note 13: For a discussion of Kennan's views on this issue, see Hunt, Ideology and U.S. Foreign Policy,
pp. 5-8. Back.
Note 14: The most cited text in the twentieth-century classical realist tradition is Hans Morgenthau's
Politics Among Nations. My description of the classical realist tradition draws heavily on this work.
Originally published in 1948, Politics Among Nations subsequently went through six editions, the last
one published in 1985 after Morgenthau's death. Scholars trained in the discipline of international
relations who have entered the policy world, such as Henry Kissinger and George Kennan, have
generally come out of the classical realist tradition. Back.
Note 15: Holsti, The Dividing Discipline, p. 146. Holsti would be hard-pressed to find any "founding
mothers" in a field that has been heavily populated by white males. Back.
Note 16: For examples see Small and Singer, Resort to Arms, and Deutsch, Nationalism and Social
Communication. Back.
Note 17: See, for example, Waltz, Theory of International Politics. Back.
Note 18: See, for example, Schelling, The Strategy of Conflict. Back.
Note 19: Keohane and Nye, Power and Interdependence. Back.
Note 20: Wallerstein, The Modern World-System, and Cardoso and Faletto, Dependency and
Development in Latin America. Back.
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Note 21: Galtung, "A Structural Theory of Imperialism." Back.
Note 22: Falk, "Contending Approaches to World Order," p. 179. Back.
Note 23: Falk et al., Toward a Just World Order. Back.
Note 24: In Sexism and the War System, ch. 4, Betty Reardon points out that world order studies scholars
and peace researchers are almost all men. She argues that, although little attention has been devoted to
gender on the part of these scholars, all the systems of oppression with which world order scholars, peace
researchers, and feminists are concerned are structurally interrelated. For a critique of Reardon's position
see Sylvester, "Some Dangers in Merging Feminist and Peace Projects." Back.
Note 25: Tong, Feminist Thought, p. My description of the varieties of contemporary feminist thought
draws heavily on her chapter 1. Back.
Note 26: Ruddick, Maternal Thinking, p. 129.See also Hartsock, Money, Sex, and Power, ch. 10. Back.
Note 27: Runyan and Peterson, "The Radical Future of Realism," p. 7. Back.
Note 28: Tong, Feminist Thought, p. 7. Back.
Note 29: Runyan and Peterson, "The Radical Future of Realism," p. 3. Back.
Note 30: Brown, "Feminism, International Theory, and International Relations of Gender Inequality," p.
469. Back.
Note 31: For a summary of these debates see Lapid, "The Third Debate." Back.
Note 32: For a sampling of these writers see International Studies Quarterly, Special Issue on "Speaking
the Language of Exile and Dissidence in International Studies." Back.
Note 33: Walker, "Contemporary Militarism and the Discourse of Dissent," in Walker, ed., Culture,
Ideology, and World Order, p. 314. Back.
Note 34: Wallensteen, "The Origins of Peace Research," ch. 1 in Wallensteen, ed., Peace Research. For
examples of new thinking on security see Ullman, "Redefining Security"; Buzan, People, States and
Fear; Independent Commission on Disarmament and Security Issues, Common Security; Stockholm
International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), Policies for Common Security; Azar and Moon, "Third
World National Security"; and Mathews, "Redefining Security." This Western new thinking on security
parallels some of Mikhail Gorbachev's "new thinking" as outlined in his political report to the
Twenty-seventh Party Congress cited in Pravda, February 26, 1986. Back.
Note 35: It is interesting to note that women were also among the pioneers in the redefinition of
international security. See Boulding, "Women in Peace Studies," in Kramarae and Spender, eds., The
Knowledge Explosion. Boulding claims that often new ideas do not receive widespread attention in any
discipline until they are adopted by men. She also makes the point that the discipline of peace research
has been as male dominated as the field of international relations. Back.
Note 36: Brown, "Feminism, International Theory, and International Relations of Gender Inequality," p.
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Gender in International Relations: Feminist Perspectives on Achieving Global Security, by J. Ann Tickner
2. Man, the State, and War: Gendered
Perspectives on National Security *
It is not in giving life but in risking life that man is raised above the animal: that is
why superiority has been accorded in humanity not to the sex that brings forth but to
that which kills. Simone de Beauvoir
The man's duty, as a member of the commonwealth, is to assist in the maintenance,
in the advance, in the defence of the state. The woman's duty, as a member of the
commonwealth, is to assist in the ordering, in the comforting, and in the beautiful
adornment of the state. John Ruskin
If we do not redefine manhood, war is inevitable.
Paul Fussell **
In the face of what is generally perceived as a dangerous international environment, states have ranked
national security high in terms of their policy priorities. According to international relations scholar
Kenneth Waltz, the state conducts its affairs in the "brooding shadow of violence," and therefore war
could break out at any time.1 In the name of national security, states have justified large defense budgets,
which take priority over domestic spending, military conscription of their young adult male population,
foreign invasions, and the curtailment of civil liberties. The security of the state is perceived as a core
value that is generally supported unquestioningly by most citizens, particularly in time of war. While the
role of the state in the twentieth century has expanded to include the provision of domestic social
programs, national security often takes precedence over the social security of individuals.
When we think about the provision of national security we enter into what has been, and continues to be,
an almost exclusively male domain. While most women support what they take to be legitimate calls for
state action in the interests of international security, the task of defining, defending, and advancing the
security interests of the state is a man's affair, a task that, through its association with war, has been
especially valorized and rewarded in many cultures throughout history. As Simone de Beauvoir's
explanation for male superiority suggests, giving one's life for one's country has been considered the
highest form of patriotism, but it is an act from which women have been virtually excluded. While men
have been associated with defending the state and advancing its international interests as soldiers and
diplomats, women have typically been engaged in the "ordering" and "comforting" roles both in the
domestic sphere, as mothers and basic needs providers, and in the caring professions, as teachers, nurses,
and social workers.2 The role of women with respect to national security has been ambiguous: defined as
those whom the state and its men are protecting, women have had little control over the conditions of
their protection.
I shall begin this chapter by examining the contemporary realist analysis of national security,
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concentrating on the work of Hans Morgenthau and Kenneth Waltz, two scholars of international
relations whom I define in chapter 1 as a classical realist and a neorealist, respectively.3 I shall also
discuss some of the ideas of Thomas Hobbes and Niccolò Machiavelli, Western political theorists whose
writings have had an important influence on contemporary realism. Of all the academic approaches to
international relations, political realism is most closely associated with the world view of foreign policy
practitioners, particularly national security specialists. Realists have concentrated their investigations on
the activities of the great powers: therefore my discussion in this section will be drawn mainly from the
experiences of the great powers, particularly the contemporary United States with whose activities
realists are centrally concerned.
For realists, security is tied to the military security of the state. Given their pessimistic assumptions about
the likely behavior of states in an "anarchic" international environment, most realists are skeptical about
the possibility of states ever achieving perfect security. In an imperfect world, where many states have
national security interests that go beyond self-preservation and where there is no international
government to curb their ambitions, realists tell us that war could break out at any time because nothing
can prevent it. Consequently, they advise, states must rely on their own power capabilities to achieve
security. The best contribution the discipline of international relations can make to national security is to
investigate the causes of war and thereby help to design "realistic" policies that can prolong intervals of
peace. Realists counsel that morality is usually ineffective in a dangerous world: a "realistic"
understanding of amoral and instrumental behavior, characteristic of international politics, is necessary if
states are not to fall prey to others' ambitions.
In looking for explanations for the causes of war, realists, as well as scholars in other approaches to
international relations, have distinguished among three levels of analysis: the individual, the state, and
the international system. While realists claim that their theories are "objective" and of universal validity,
the assumptions they use when analyzing states and explaining their behavior in the international system
are heavily dependent on characteristics that we, in the West, have come to associate with masculinity.
The way in which realists describe the individual, the state, and the international system are profoundly
gendered; each is constructed in terms of the idealized or hegemonic masculinity described in chapter 1.
In the name of universality, realists have constructed a world view based on the experiences of certain
men: it is therefore a world view that offers us only a partial view of reality.
Having examined the connection between realism and masculinity, I shall examine some feminist
perspectives on national security. Using feminist theories, which draw on the experiences of women, I
shall ask how it would affect the way in which we think about national security if we were to develop an
alternative set of assumptions about the individual, the state, and the international system not based
exclusively on the behavior of men. Realist assumptions about states as unitary actors render
unproblematic the boundaries between anarchy and order and legitimate and illegitimate violence. If we
were to include the experiences of women, how would it affect the way in which we understand the
meaning of violence? While women have been less directly involved in international violence as soldiers,
their lives have been affected by domestic violence in households, another unprotected space, and by the
consequences of war and the policy priorities of militarized societies. Certain feminists have suggested
that, because of what they see as a connection between sexism and militarism, violence at all levels of
society is interrelated, a claim that calls into question the realist assumption of the anarchy/order
distinction. Most important, these feminists claim that all types of violence are embedded in the gender
hierarchies of dominance and subordination that I described in chapter 1. Hence they would argue that
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until these and other hierarchies associated with class and race are dismantled and until women have
control over their own security a truly comprehensive system of security cannot be devised.
National Security and Contemporary Realism
Realist Prescriptions for National Security
Realists believe that, since there is no international government capable of enforcing impartial rules for
states' behavior, states must take matters of security into their own hands even if it yields dangerous
results. Kenneth Waltz uses eighteenth-century philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau's metaphor of a stag
hunt to describe the likely security-seeking behavior of states given this condition of anarchy. Five
hungry men agree to trap and share a stag, but when a hare runs by one man grabs it, thereby letting the
stag escape: by defecting from the common goal, this hunter sacrifices the long-term cooperative
interests of the group, his own included, for his immediate short-term interest.4 For realists, this story
illustrates the problematic nature of national security: in an international system of anarchy, rationality
would dictate that mutual cooperation would work in the interest of all. But since men are self-seeking,
politically ambitious, and not always rational, we must assume that some states and some men will not be
cooperative and will start wars. Given the lack of an international government with powers of
enforcement, states must therefore depend on themselves for their own security needs even if this is not
in the best interests of the system as a whole.
For realists this is the classic security dilemma.5 In an imperfect world states can never be sure of one
another's intentions, so they arm themselves to achieve security; since this is an act that threatens
someone else's security, it sets in motion a vicious cycle which results in the spiraling procurement of
armaments and the possibility that war could break out at any time. Faced with the ever present threat of
violence and the lack of a sanctioning authority to control it, how do realists suggest that states should act
to promote peace and stability in such an environment?
Given their belief that perfect security is unattainable in an imperfect world, realists believe that states
can best optimize their security through preparation for war. For Hans Morgenthau, the security of the
state is attained and preserved through the maximization of power, particularly military power. Elements
of national power include secure geographical boundaries, large territorial size, the capacity for
self-sufficiency in natural and industrial resources, and a strong technological base, all of which
contribute to a strong military capability.6 Kenneth Waltz suggests that states can enhance their security
by following the principle of self-help: in an anarchical international system, states must help themselves,
for they can count on no one else to do so. For Waltz, security depends on avoiding dependence and
building the capabilities necessary to defend against other states' aggressive acts: the greatest rewards for
a state come, not from an increase in well-being, which might be achieved through heightened
interdependence, but from the maintenance of autonomy.7 In a dangerous world, Waltz predicts that
states with the most power will be the most successful, because power permits a wide range of action.
Prescriptions such as Morgenthau's power maximization or Waltz's more ambiguously defined notion of
self-help can have dangerous consequences, given the conditions of anarchy and mutual distrust. In such
an environment what prospects for peace and security that do exist rest on the operation of the balance of
power, a mechanism that is crucial for realist explanations of the behavior of states in the international
system. Morgenthau claims that peace depends on two mechanisms-- balance of power and international
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law; since he believes that depending solely on the latter is unrealistic, given the lack of any international
enforcement mechanism, peace will be maintained, although imperfectly, by the balance of power. For
realists, balance of power becomes an explanation of states' behavior as well as a device for their
self-preservation. While Morgenthau is somewhat ambivalent as to whether states intentionally engage in
power balancing, Waltz claims that even if it is not the intention of any one state, balances will form as
states act, either alone or through alliances, to counter the power of others. Since alliances are often
fragile and the power capabilities of states change, power balances tend toward instability. Given these
uncertainties, Waltz claims that the bipolar balance of the Cold War period was more stable than
multipolar systems. Not only did the United States and the Soviet Union check each others' actions
without relying on alliance partners to increase their capabilities, but, in a bipolar world, each responded
to unsettling events within clearly demarcated spheres of influence, thus maintaining stability throughout
the system.8
In the post-World War II world, this bipolar balance of power became what less sanguine observers
termed a "balance of terror" that rested on the vast array of nuclear weapons possessed by both the
United States and the Soviet Union. In the United States, the unprecedented buildup and maintenance of
huge military arsenals in a time of "peace" led to a new branch of international relations scholarship
known as national security studies. While national security scholars are realists in their basic assumptions
and explanations, during the Cold War era they focused almost exclusively on designing a military
strategy for the United States with respect to the Soviet Union. As national security specialists have
moved between academia and government, American national security policy has rested on the realist
prescription of increasing security through preparation for war.
Strategic thinking has centered on the notion of deterrence, which means relying on one's strategic
capability to prevent the enemy from attacking. From the 1960s until the end of the Cold War, the notion
of mutual deterrence characterized the strategic relationship between the United States and the Soviet
Union. The stability of mutual deterrence, a nuclear form of bipolar power-balancing, depends on second
strike capability, the ability of both sides to destroy each others' homeland with nuclear weapons after
either side has launched a first attack. Although the United States and the Soviet Union engaged in a
massive military buildup to preserve their security during the Cold War, ultimately that security rested on
mutual vulnerability since neither side developed the defensive capability to resist the other's attack.
However, strategists claim that this rough balance between the capabilities of each side was relatively
stable because each side understood that to strike first would be to commit suicide. Even though realists
have cautioned against the dangers of unpredictable actions by aggressive men and expansionist states,
this argument in favor of strategic stability placed a great deal of emphasis on rationality, an emphasis
prevalent in realist thinking more generally.
Realism's prescriptions for national security, described above, rest on the claims of its scholars that they
are presenting a rational, objective assessment of the international system and the behavior of the states
that constitute it. Labeling those who believe in the possibility of eliminating war through international
law, international cooperation, or disarmament "idealists," realists claim that only through this "realistic"
understanding of the nature of the international system can states undertake policies that will be
successful in preserving their national security. Realists believe that explanations of states' behavior can
be described in terms of laws that are objective, universal, and timeless. Politics, Morgenthau tells us, is
governed by objective laws that have their roots in human nature; therefore it is possible to discover a
rational theory that reflects these objective laws. Political realism, which for Morgenthau is the concept
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of interest defined in terms of power, stresses the rational, objective, and unemotional. Morgenthau
claims that, in order to develop an autonomous theory of political behavior, "political man" must be
abstracted from other aspects of human behavior. Political man is amoral; a failure to understand this
drive to power, which is at the root of the behavior of both individuals and states, can be the pitfall of
well-meaning statesmen whose attempts to act morally in the conduct of foreign relations can jeopardize
the security of their own people.9
Since Morgenthau wrote the first edition of Politics Among Nations in 1948, the search for an objective,
rational science of international politics based on models imported from economics and the natural
sciences has been an important goal of the realist agenda. Neorealists, who have attempted to construct a
positivist "science" of international relations, have used game theoretic and rational choice models in an
effort to insert more scientific rigor into the field. Realists, as well as some of their critics, have also
introduced the concept of "levels of analysis" to explore the causes of international wars more
systematically. In international relations scholarship, causal explanations for war are conventionally
situated at the levels of the individual, the state, or the international system.10
While most international relations literature concentrates on the second and third levels, neorealists, who
are attempting to build more parsimonious and "scientific" approaches to the discipline, favor
system-level explanations. Rejecting what he terms reductionist theories, Waltz claims that only at the
level of the international system can we discover laws that can help us to understand the international
behavior of states and the propensity for conflict. Waltz asserts that it is not possible to understand states'
behavior simply by looking at each individual unit; one must look at the structure as a whole and see how
each state's capabilities stand in relation to others'. The extent to which states will be successful in
attaining their goals and providing for their own security can be predicted by analyzing their relative
power capabilities. But given this self-seeking behavior in an anarchic environment, conflict is a likely
outcome. Focusing his explanations at the level of the international system, Waltz claims that it is
possible to observe regularities in the power-balancing behavior of states that can be explained in terms
similar to those of equilibrium theory in microeconomics.11
A Gendered Perspective on National Security
Morgenthau, Waltz, and other realists claim that it is possible to develop a rational, objective theory of
international politics based on universal laws that operate across time and space. In her feminist critique
of the natural sciences, Evelyn Fox Keller points out that most scientific communities share the
"assumption that the universe they study is directly accessible, represented by concepts shaped not by
language but only by the demands of logic and experiment." The laws of nature, according to this view
of science, are beyond the relativity of language.12 Like most contemporary feminists, Keller rejects this
positivist view of science that, she asserts, imposes a coercive, hierarchical, and conformist pattern on
scientific inquiry. Since most contemporary feminist scholars believe that knowledge is socially
constructed, they are skeptical of finding an unmediated foundation for knowledge that realists claim is
possible. Since they believe that it is language that transmits knowledge, many feminists suggest that the
scholarly claims about the neutral uses of language and about objectivity must continually be
questioned.13
I shall now investigate the individual, the state, and the international system-- the three levels of analysis
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that realists use in their analysis of war and national security-- and examine how they have been
constructed in realist discourse. I shall argue that the language used to describe these concepts comes out
of a Western-centered historical worldview that draws almost exclusively on the experiences of men.
Underneath its claim to universality this worldview privileges a view of security that is constructed out of
values associated with hegemonic masculinity.
"Political Man"
In his Politics Among Nations, a text rich in historical detail, Morgenthau has constructed a world almost
entirely without women. Morgenthau claims that individuals are engaged in a struggle for power
whenever they come into contact with one another, for the tendency to dominate exists at all levels of
human life: the family, the polity, and the international system; it is modified only by the conditions
under which the struggle takes place.14 Since women rarely occupy positions of power in any of these
arenas, we can assume that, when Morgenthau talks about domination, he is talking primarily about men,
although not all men.15 His "political man" is a social construct based on a partial representation of
human nature abstracted from the behavior of men in positions of public power.16 Morgenthau goes on to
suggest that, while society condemns the violent behavior that can result from this struggle for power
within the polity, it encourages it in the international system in the form of war.
While Morgenthau's "political man" has been criticized by other international relations scholars for its
essentializing view of human nature, the social construction of hegemonic masculinity and its opposition
to a devalued femininity described in chapter 1, have been central to the way in which the discourse of
international politics has been constructed more generally. In Western political theory from the Greeks to
Machiavelli, traditions upon which contemporary realism relies heavily for its analysis, this socially
constructed type of masculinity has been projected onto the international behavior of states. The violence
with which it is associated has been legitimated through the glorification of war.
The militarized version of citizenship, similar to the "manly" behavior described in chapter 1, can be
traced back to the ancient Greek city-states on whose history realists frequently draw in constructing
their analysis. For the Greeks, the most honored way to achieve recognition as a citizen was through
heroic performance and sacrifice in war. The real test of manly virtue or "arete," a militarized notion of
greatness, was victory in battle.17 The Greek city-state was a community of warriors. Women and slaves
involved in the realm of "necessity" in the household or the economy were not included as citizens for
they would pollute the higher realm of politics.18
This exclusive definition of the citizen-warrior reemerges in sixteenth-century Europe in the writings of
Niccolò Machiavelli. Since he associates human excellence with the competitive striving for power, what
is a negative but unavoidable characteristic of human nature for Morgenthau is a virtue for Machiavelli.
Machiavelli translates this quest for power into the glorification of the warrior-prince whose prowess in
battle was necessary for the salvation of his native Florence in the face of powerful external threats.
For feminists, warrior-citizenship is neither a negative, unavoidable characterization of human nature,
nor a desirable possibility; it is a revisable, gendered construction of personality and citizenship. Feminist
political theorist Wendy Brown suggests that Machiavelli's representation of the political world and its
citizenry is profoundly gendered; it is dependent on an image of true manliness that demands qualities
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that are superior to those that naturally inhere in men.19 Hannah Pitkin claims that for Machiavelli
triumph in war, honor and liberty in civic life, and independent critical thought and manliness in personal
relationships are all bound together by a central preoccupation with autonomy, a characteristic associated
with masculinity.20 True manliness, demanded of the ideal citizen-warrior, is encompassed in the
concept "virtu," which means, in its literal sense, manly activity. For Machiavelli, virtu is insight,
energetic activity, effectiveness, and courage: it demands overcoming a man's self-indulgence and
laziness.21
Just as the concept of hegemonic masculinity, described in chapter 1, requires for its construction an
oppositional relationship to a devalued femininity, Machiavelli's construction of the citizen-warrior
required a similarly devalued "other" against which true manhood and autonomy could be set. In
Machiavelli's writings this feminine other is "fortuna," originally a Roman goddess associated with
capriciousness and unpredictability. Hannah Pitkin claims that in Machiavelli's writings fortuna is
presented as the feminine power in men themselves against which they must continually struggle to
maintain their autonomy.22 In the public world, Machiavelli depicts fortuna as chance, situations that
could not have been foreseen or that men fail to control. The capriciousness of fortuna cannot be
prevented, but it can be prepared against and overcome through the cultivation of manly virtues.
According to Brown, fortuna and virtu are in permanent combat: both are supremely gendered
constructions that involve a notion of manliness that is tied to the conquest of women.23 In Machiavelli's
own words, "Fortune is a woman, and it is necessary if you wish to master her, to conquer her by
force."24
Having constructed these explicitly gendered representations of virtu and fortuna, Machiavelli also
makes it clear that he considers women to be a threat to the masculinity of the citizen-warrior. Although
they scarcely appear in Machiavelli's political writings, when women are discussed, Machiavelli portrays
them as both dangerous and inferior.25The most dangerous threat to both a man and a state is to be like a
women because women are weak, fearful, indecisive, and dependent-- stereotypes that, as described in
chapter 1, still surface when assessing women's suitability for the military and the conduct of foreign
policy today.
While contemporary international relations does not employ this explicitly misogynist discourse, the
contemporary understanding of citizenship still remains bound up with the Greeks' and Machiavelli's
depictions of the citizen-warrior. The most noble sacrifice a citizen can make is to give his life for his
country. When the National Organization for Women decided to support the drafting of women into the
United States military, it argued its case on the grounds that, if women were barred from participation in
the armed forces on an equal footing with men, they would remain second-class citizens denied the
unique political responsibility of risking one's life for the state.26 But in spite of women's increasing
numbers in noncombat roles in the armed forces of certain states, the relationship between soldiering,
masculinity, and citizenship remains very strong in most societies today.
To be a soldier is to be a man, not a woman; more than any other social institution, the military separates
men from women. Soldiering is a role into which boys are socialized in school and on the playing fields.
A soldier must be a protector; he must show courage, strength, and responsibility and repress feelings of
fear, vulnerability, and compassion. Such feelings are womanly traits, which are liabilities in time of
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war.27 War demands manliness; it is an event in which boys become men, for combat is the ultimate test
of masculinity. When women become soldiers, this gender identity is called into question; for
Americans, this questioning became real during the Persian Gulf war of 1991, the first time that women
soldiers were sent into a war zone in large numbers.28
To understand the citizen-warrior as a social construction allows us to question the essentialist
connection between war and men's natural aggressiveness. Considerable evidence suggests that most
men would prefer not to fight; many refuse to do so even when they are put in positions that make it
difficult not to. One study shows that in World War II, on the average, only 15 percent of soldiers
actually fired their weapons in battle, even when threatened by enemy soldiers.29 Because military
recruiters cannot rely on violent qualities in men, they appeal to manliness and patriotic duty. Judith
Stiehm avers that military trainers resort to manipulation of men's anxiety about their sexual identity in
order to increase soldiers' willingness to fight. In basic training the term of utmost derision is to be called
a girl or a lady.30 The association between men and violence therefore depends not on men's innate
aggressiveness, but on the construction of a gendered identity that places heavy pressure on soldiers to
prove themselves as men.
Just as the Greeks gave special respect to citizens who had proved themselves in war, it is still a special
mark of respect in many societies to be a war veteran, an honor that is denied to all women as well as to
certain men. In the United States, nowhere is this more evident than in the political arena where "political
man's" identity is importantly tied to his service in the military. Sheila Tobias suggests that there are risks
involved for politicians seeking office who have chosen not to serve in combat or for women who cannot
serve. War service is of special value for gaining votes even in political offices not exclusively concerned
with foreign policy. In the United States, former generals are looked upon favorably as presidential
candidates, and many American presidents have run for office on their war record. In the 1984 vice
presidential debates between George Bush and Geraldine Ferraro, Bush talked about his experience as a
navy pilot shot down in World War II; while this might seem like a dubious qualification for the office of
vice president, it was one that Ferraro-- to her detriment-- could not counter.31
To be a first-class citizen therefore, one must be a warrior. It is an important qualification for the politics
of national security for it is to such men that the state entrusts its most vital interests. Characteristics
associated with femininity are considered a liability when dealing with the realities of international
politics. When realists write about national security, they often do so in abstract and depersonalized
terms, yet they are constructing a discourse shaped out of these gendered identities. This notion of
manhood, crucial for upholding the interests of the state, is an image that is frequently extended to the
way in which we personify the behavior of the state itself.
The Masculine State
"To Saddam,' Mr. Cheney wrote on the 2,000 pound bomb destined for an Iraqi target. 'With
appreciation, Dick Cheney."32 In times of war, the state itself becomes a citizen-warrior: military
commanders refer to the enemy as a singular "he." The 1991 Persian Gulf war was frequently depicted as
a personal contest between Saddam Hussein and George Bush and described in the appropriate
locker-room or football language.33 When realists describe the international behavior of states more
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generally, they present us with similarly masculine images of stag hunts or "games nations play."34 Hans
Morgenthau described the Soviet-American rivalry of the early Cold War period as "the primitive
spectacle of two giants eying each other with watchful suspicion. ... Both prepare to strike the first
decisive blow, for if one does not strike it the other might."35
More recently, however, neorealism has depicted states rather differently, as abstract unitary actors
whose actions are explained through laws that can be universalized across time and place and whose
internal characteristics are irrelevant to the operation of these laws. States appear to act according to
some higher rationality that is presented as independent of human agency. Nowhere in the rational
power-balancing behavior of states can we find the patriot willing to go to war to defend his women and
children in the name of national security. As poststructuralist international relations theorist Richard
Ashley suggests, the "rationalization of global politics" has led to an antihumanism whereby states,
posited unproblematically as unitary actors, act independently of human interests.36 It is a world in
which, as Jean Elshtain observes, "No children are ever born, and nobody ever dies. ... There are states,
and they are what is."37
Behind this reification of state practices hide social institutions that are made and remade by individual
actions. In reality, the neorealist depiction of the state as a unitary actor is grounded in the historical
practices of the Western state system: neorealist characterizations of state behavior, in terms of self-help,
autonomy, and power seeking, privilege characteristics associated with the Western construction of
masculinity. Since the beginning of the state system, the national security functions of states have been
deeded to us through gendered images that privilege masculinity.
The Western state system began in seventeenth-century Europe. As described by Charles Tilly, the
modern state was born through war; leaders of nascent states consolidated their power through the
coercive extraction of resources and the conquest of ever-larger territories. Success in war continued to
be imperative for state survival and the building of state apparatus.38 Throughout the period of state
building in the West, nationalist movements have used gendered imagery that exhorts masculine heroes
to fight for the establishment and defense of the mother country. The collective identity of citizens in
most states depends heavily on telling stories about, and celebration of, wars of independence or national
liberation and other great victories in battle. National anthems are frequently war songs, just as holidays
are celebrated with military parades and uniforms that recall great feats in past conflicts. These collective
historical memories are very important for the way in which individuals define themselves as citizens as
well as for the way in which states command support for their policies, particularly foreign policy.
Rarely, however, do they include experiences of women or female heroes.
While the functions of twentieth-century states extend well beyond the provision of national security,
national security issues, particularly in time of war, offer a sense of shared political purpose lacking in
most other areas of public policy.39 The state continues to derive much of its legitimacy from its security
function; it is for national security that citizens are willing to make sacrifices, often unquestioningly.40
Military budgets are the least likely area of public spending to be contested by politicians and the public,
who are often manipulated into supporting military spending by linking it with patriotism. When we
think about the state acting in matters of national security, we are entering a policy world almost
exclusively inhabited by men. Men make national security policy both inside and outside the military
establishment.
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In the United States, women have entered the military primarily in the lower ranks. Despite growing
numbers of women in the U.S. military, which at present has the largest percentage of women of any
military establishment, it remains a male institution. According to an internal review at the United States
Naval Academy fourteen years after the first woman was admitted, reported in the New York Times of
October 10, 1990, a considerable segment of midshipmen, faculty, and staff believed that women have
no place there.41 Judith Stiehm suggests that American military leaders think of the armed services as
"belonging" to men whereas in reality they belong to citizens, more than half of whom are women.42
When women enter the military, their position is ambiguous; men do not want women fighting alongside
them, and the public perceives the role of wife and mother as less compatible with being a soldier than
that of husband and father. While modern technology blurs the distinction between combat and
noncombat roles, women are still barred from combat roles in all militaries, and the functions that
women perform are less rewarded than those of the fighting forces.43 Joining the debate in the United
States in 1991 over women's suitability for combat, retired U.S. General Robert Barrow declared,
"Women give life, sustain life, nurture life. ... If you want to make a combat unit ineffective, assign
women to it."44
In the nuclear age military strategy must be planned in peacetime, since it is hypothesized that there
would be no time to plan a strategy that involves the use of nuclear weapons once war has broken out.
Nuclear strategy is constructed by civilian national security specialists, far removed from public debate,
in a language that, while it is too esoteric for most people to understand, claims to be rational and
objective. Carol Cohn argues that strategic discourse, with its emphasis on strength, stability, and
rationality, bears an uncanny resemblance to the ideal image of masculinity. Critics of U.S. nuclear
strategy are branded as irrational and emotional. In the United States, these "defense intellectuals" are
almost all white men; Cohn tells us that while their language is one of abstraction, it is loaded with
sexual imagery.45 She claims that the discourse employed in professional and political debates about
U.S. security policy "would appear to have colonized our minds and to have subjugated other ways of
understanding relations among states."46 Cohn suggests that this discourse has become the only
legitimate response to questions of how best to achieve national security; it is a discourse far removed
from politics and people, and its deliberations go on disconnected from the functions they are supposed
to serve. Its powerful claim to legitimacy rests, in part, on the way national security specialists view the
international system.
The International System: The War of Everyman Against Everyman
According to Richard Ashley, realists have privileged a higher reality called "the sovereign state" against
which they have posited anarchy understood in a negative way as difference, ambiguity, and
contingency-- as a space that is external and dangerous.47 All these characteristics have also been
attributed to women. Anarchy is an actual or potential site of war. The most common metaphor that
realists employ to describe the anarchical international system is that of the seventeenth-century English
philosopher Thomas Hobbes's depiction of the state of nature. Although Hobbes did not write much
about international politics, realists have applied his description of individuals' behavior in a hypothetical
precontractual state of nature, which Hobbes termed the war of everyman against everyman, to the
behavior of states in the international system.48
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Carole Pateman argues that, in all contemporary discussions of the state of nature, the differentiation
between the sexes is generally ignored, even though it was an important consideration for contract
theorists themselves.49 Although Hobbes did suggest that women as well as men could be free and equal
individuals in the state of nature, his description of human behavior in this environment refers to that of
adult males whose behavior is taken as constitutive of human nature as a whole by contemporary realist
analysis. According to Jane Flax, the individuals that Hobbes described in the state of nature appeared to
come to full maturity without any engagement with one another; they were solitary creatures lacking any
socialization in interactive behavior. Any interactions they did have led to power struggles that resulted
in domination or submission. Suspicion of others' motives led to behavior characterized by aggression,
self-interest, and the drive for autonomy.50 In a similar vein, Christine Di Stephano uses feminist
psychoanalytic theory to support her claim that the masculine dimension of atomistic egoism is
powerfully underscored in Hobbes's state of nature, which, she asserts, is built on the foundation of
denied maternity. "Hobbes' abstract man is a creature who is self-possessed and radically solitary in a
crowded and inhospitable world, whose relations with others are unavoidably contractual and whose
freedom consists in the absence of impediments to the attainment of privately generated and understood
desires."51
As a model of human behavior, Hobbes's depiction of individuals in the state of nature is partial at best;
certain feminists have argued that such behavior could be applicable only to adult males, for if life was to
go on for more than one generation in the state of nature, women must have been involved in activities
such as reproduction and child rearing rather than in warfare. Reproductive activities require an
environment that can provide for the survival of infants and behavior that is interactive and nurturing.
An international system that resembles Hobbes's state of nature is a dangerous environment. Driven by
competition for scarce resources and mistrust of others' motives in a system that lacks any legitimate
authority, states, like men, must rely on their own resources for self-preservation.52 Machiavelli offers
advice to his prince that is based on similar assumptions about the international system. Both Pitkin and
Brown note that Machiavelli's portrayal of fortuna is regularly associated with nature, as something
outside the political world that must be subdued and controlled. Pitkin refers to "The Golden Ass," a long
unfinished poem by Machiavelli, based on the legend of Circe, a female figure who lives in the forest
world and turns men into animals.53 Translated into international politics this depiction of fortuna is
similar to the disorder or anarchy of the international system as portrayed by realists. Capturing the
essence of Realpolitik, Brown suggests that, for Machiavelli, politics is a continual quest for power and
independence; it is dependent on the presence of an enemy at all times, for without spurs to greatness
energized by fighting an enemy, the polity would collapse.
Just as the image of waging war against an exterior other figured centrally in Machiavelli's writings, war
is central to the way we learn about international relations. Our historical memories of international
politics are deeded to us through wars as we mark off time periods in terms of intervals between
conflicts. We learn that dramatic changes take place in the international system after major wars when
the relative power of states changes. Wars are fought for many reasons; yet, frequently, the rationale for
fighting wars is presented in gendered terms such as the necessity of standing up to aggression rather
then being pushed around or appearing to be a sissy or a wimp. Support for wars is often garnered
through the appeal to masculine characteristics. As Sara Ruddick states, while the masculinity of war
may be a myth, it is one that sustains both women and men in their support for violence.54 War is a time
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when male and female characteristics become polarized; it is a gendering activity at a time when the
discourse of militarism and masculinity permeates the whole fabric of society.55
As Jean Elshtain points out, war is an experience to which women are exterior; men have inhabited the
world of war in a way that women have not.56 The history of international politics is therefore a history
from which women are, for the most part, absent. Little material can be found on women's roles in wars;
generally they are seen as victims, rarely as agents. While war can be a time of advancement for women
as they step in to do men's jobs, the battlefront takes precedence, so the hierarchy remains and women are
urged to step aside once peace is restored. When women themselves engage in violence, it is often
portrayed as a mob or a food riot that is out of control.57 Movements for peace, which are also part of our
history, have not been central to the conventional way in which the evolution of the Western state system
has been presented to us. International relations scholars of the early twentieth century, who wrote
positively about the possibilities of international law and the collective security system of the League of
Nations, were labeled "idealists" and not taken seriously by the more powerful realist tradition.
Metaphors, such as Hobbes's state of nature are primarily concerned with representing conflictual
relations between great powers. The images used to describe nineteenth-century imperialist projects and
contemporary great power relations with former colonial states are somewhat different. Historically,
colonial people were often described in terms that drew on characteristics associated with women in
order to place them lower in a hierarchy that put their white male colonizers on top. As the European
state system expanded outward to conquer much of the world in the nineteenth century, its "civilizing"
mission was frequently described in stereotypically gendered terms. Colonized peoples were often
described as being effeminate, masculinity was an attribute of the white man, and colonial order
depended on Victorian standards of manliness. Cynthia Enloe suggests that the concept of "ladylike
behavior" was one of the mainstays of imperialist civilization. Like sanitation and Christianity, feminine
respectability was meant to convince colonizers and colonized alike that foreign conquest was right and
necessary. Masculinity denoted protection of the respectable lady; she stood for the civilizing mission
that justified the colonization of benighted peoples.58 Whereas the feminine stood for danger and
disorder for Machiavelli, the European female, in contrast to her colonial counterpart, came to represent a
stable, civilized order in nineteenth-century representations of British imperialism.
An example of the way in which these gender identities were manipulated to justify Western policy with
respect to the rest of the world can also be seen in attitudes toward Latin America prevalent in the United
States in the nineteenth century. According to Michael Hunt, nineteenth-century American images of
Latin society depicted a (usually black) male who was lazy, dishonest, and corrupt. A contrary image that
was more positive-- a Latin as redeemable-- took the form of a fair-skinned senorita living in a
marginalized society, yet escaping its degrading effects. Hunt suggests that Americans entered the
twentieth century with three images of Latin America fostered through legends brought back by
American merchants and diplomats. These legends, perpetuated through school texts, cartoons, and
political rhetoric, were even incorporated into the views of policymakers. The three images pictured the
Latin as a half-breed brute, feminized, or infantile. In each case, Americans stood superior; the first
image permitted a predatory aggressiveness, the second allowed the United States to assume the role of
ardent suitor, and the third justified America's need to provide tutelage and discipline. All these images
are profoundly gendered: the United States as a civilizing warrior, a suitor, or a father, and Latin America
as a lesser male, a female, or a child.59
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Such images, although somewhat muted, remain today and are particularly prevalent in the thinking of
Western states when they are dealing with the Third World. In the post-World War II era, there was
considerable debate in Western capitals about the dangers of premature independence for primitive
peoples. In the postindependence era, former colonial states and their leaders have frequently been
portrayed as emotional and unpredictable, characteristics also associated with women. C. D. Jackson, an
adviser to President Eisenhower and a patron of Western development theorists in the 1950s, evoked
these feminine characteristics when he observed that "the Western world has somewhat more experience
with the operations of war, peace, and parliamentary procedures than the swirling mess of emotionally
super-charged Africans and Asiatics and Arabs that outnumber us."60
According to Hunt, Eisenhower himself regarded the English-speaking people of the world as superior to
all the rest; thus they provided a model for right behavior in the international system. This idea is not
incompatible with contemporary realism, which, while it has been an approach dominated by white
Anglo-Saxon men, has prescribed the behavior of states throughout the international system. As we have
witnessed the enormous buildup of nuclear weapons on the part of the United States and the former
Soviet Union beyond any level that could be considered "rational," our policymakers caution that only a
few of these same weapons in the hands of people in the Third World pose a greater threat to world
security.
In this section, I have shown how realists paint a consistent three-tiered picture of a world in which
survival in a violence-prone international system "requires" war-capable states peopled by heroic
masculine citizen-warriors. This picture legitimates certain "realistic" portrayals of situations and
conduct at each level, which serve to reinforce the need for power balancing, strong states, and
citizen-warriors. It achieves relative consistency by downplaying the feasibility and attractiveness of
alternative possibilities at each level of analysis by claiming that peaceful international systems are
idealist utopias, that non-power-seeking states are soon conquered or dismembered, and that citizens who
are not warriors are inessential to the reproduction of the state.
Feminist perspectives should question the analytical separability of these three levels of analysis, which
realists have treated as supposedly independent levels or aspects of reality. If systems-oriented realists
criticize reductionist causal accounts focused only on human nature, feminists might equally well object
that scientific causal analyses of state and system-level phenomena distract our attention from the role of
responsible individuals and groups in the construction and maintenance of state-level and systemic
relationships. Power-oriented statesmen have a vested interest vis-a-vis their domestic supporters in
painting a picture of the world around them as threateningly anarchic; anarchic international systems are
reproduced by individuals who believe no alternatives exist.
Recognizing the gendered construction of this three-tiered world picture, feminist perspectives on
national security must offer alternative conceptions. Assuming that these categories are mutually
constitutive and mutually reinforcing of each other, we should heed Paul Fussell's claim, in the epigraph
to this chapter, that our conception of the possibilities of individual manhood must be redefined in theory
and practice before war at the international systemic level can be regarded as avoidable. These gendered
depictions of political man, the state, and the international system generate a national security discourse
that privileges conflict and war and silences other ways of thinking about security; moving away from
valorizing human characteristics that are associated with the risking of life, toward an affirmation of
life-giving qualities, allows us to envisage alternative conceptions of national security.
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National Security Reconsidered
Certain critics of realism have begun to ask whether we can continue to rely on war as the ultimate
instrument for the achievement of national security. In a world where nuclear conflict could result in the
destruction of winners and losers alike (as well as the natural environment), realist prescriptions to
maximize power could actually be counterproductive. In the absence of a viable defense, nuclear
weapons make boundary protection impossible; thus the distinctions between domestic and international,
soldiers and civilians, and protectors and protected are breaking down.61 In 1982 the Independent
Commission on Disarmament and Security Issues warned that, after thirty-seven years, nuclear
deterrence was becoming fragile because of a decreased sensitivity to dangers, the possibility of
accidents in crisis situations, and new technologies that may be increasing the possibility of limited
nuclear war.62 In the nuclear age, the fact that the security of states depends on the insecurity of their
citizens has stretched the traditional concept of national security to its limit.
Critics of realism argue that a more global vision of security is necessary. The extent to which realism
has been able to justify its distinction between domestic order and international anarchy depends on its
focus on the major actors in the international system. Internally, most Western states have been relatively
peaceful since World War II, if peace is narrowly defined as the absence of military conflict. Thinking
about security from a global perspective must take into account that 90 percent of the military conflicts
of the 1970s and 1980s took place in the Third World; many were domestic, some international and
some, particularly when the great powers were involved, blurred the distinction between the two.63
Security threats have traditionally been defined as threats to national boundaries, but since the end of the
process of decolonialization, relatively few cross-border wars and changes in international boundaries
have occurred, in spite of the large number of military conflicts. For people in the Third World, as well
as in Eastern Europe and, more recently, in the states of the former Soviet Union, security threats have
often been internal. Repression by regimes reacting against ethnic minorities or popular discontent
creates a situation in which states can become threats to, rather than providers of, security. The
militarization of much of the Third World, often with weapons supplied by great powers whose interests
frequently coincide with keeping unpopular regimes in power, has led to the legitimation of states
frequently depending on their recognition by the international community rather than by their domestic
populations.64 These trends, together with the winding down of some significant international conflicts in
the late 1980s, suggest that we may be moving toward a system characterized by international order and
domestic disorder, a situation that could turn the traditional notion of national security on its head.
Acknowledging these multiple sources of insecurity, various new thinkers have come up with very
different definitions of security. In the introduction to the Report of the Independent Commission on
Disarmament and Security Issues, Olof Palme defines security in terms of joint survival rather than
mutual destruction.65 The commission defines what it calls "common security" in terms that extend well
beyond nuclear strategic issues. It looks at security in North-South as well as East-West terms; focusing
on military conflict in the Third World, new thinking points to possible contradictions between the
military security of states and the economic well-being of their citizens. The Palme Report notes that a
growing militarization of the Third World has drained resources that might otherwise be used for
economic development.
When we consider security from the perspective of the individual, we find that new thinking is beginning
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to provide us with definitions of security that are less state-centered and less militaristic. But little
attention has been paid either to gender issues or to women's particular needs with respect to security or
to their contributions toward its achievement. Feminist reformulations of the meaning of security are
needed to draw attention to the extent to which gender hierarchies themselves are a source of domination
and thus an obstacle to a truly comprehensive definition of security. I shall now turn to the issue of how
women might define national security and to an analysis of security from a feminist perspective.
Feminist Perspectives on National Security
Women Define Security
It is difficult to find definitions by women of national security. While it is not necessarily the case that
women have not had ideas on this subject, they are not readily accessible in the literature of international
relations. When women speak or write about national security, they are often dismissed as being naive or
unrealistic. An example of this is the women in the United States and Europe who spoke out in the early
years of the century for a more secure world order. Addressing the International Congress of Women at
the Hague during World War I, Jane Addams spoke of the need for a new internationalism to replace the
self-destructive nationalism that contributed so centrally to the outbreak and mass destruction of that war.
Resolutions adopted at the close of the congress questioned the assumption that women, and civilians
more generally, could be protected during modern war. The conference concluded that assuring security
through military means was no longer possible owing to the indiscriminate nature of modern warfare,
and it called for disarmament as a more appropriate course for ensuring future security.66
At the Women's International Peace Conference in Halifax, Canada, in 1985, a meeting of women from
all over the world, participants defined security in various ways depending on the most immediate threats
to their survival; security meant safe working conditions and freedom from the threat of war or
unemployment or the economic squeeze of foreign debt. Discussions of the meaning of security revealed
divisions between Western middle-class women's concerns with nuclear war, concerns that were similar
to those of Jane Addams and her colleagues, and Third World women who defined insecurity more
broadly in terms of the structural violence associated with imperialism, militarism, racism, and sexism.
Yet all agreed that security meant nothing if it was built on others' insecurity.67
The final document of the World Conference to Review and Appraise the Achievements of the United
Nations Decade for Women, held in Nairobi in 1985, offered a similarly multidimensional definition of
security. The introductory chapter of the document defined peace as "not only the absence of war,
violence and hostilities at the national and international levels but also the enjoyment of economic and
social justice."68 All these definitions of security take issue with realists' assumptions that security is
zero-sum and must therefore be built on the insecurity of others.
Jane Addams's vision of national security, which deemphasizes its military dimension and was dismissed
at the time as impractical, is quite compatible with the new thinking on common security I have just
described. Like women at the Halifax and Nairobi conferences, contemporary new thinkers also include
the elimination of structural violence in their definition of security. Feminist peace researcher Elise
Boulding tells us that women peace researchers were among the pioneers in this contemporary
redefinition of security, although, like Jane Addams at the beginning of the century, their work did not
receive the attention it deserved. It is often the case that new ideas in any discipline do not receive
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widespread attention unless they are adopted by significant numbers of men, in which case women's
work tends to become invisible through co-optation. Boulding claims that the one area in which women
are not in danger of co-optation is their analysis of patriarchy and the linkage of war to violence against
women.69 Like most other feminists, Boulding believes that these issues must also be included in any
comprehensive definition of security.
Given these various definitions of security offered by women, it is evident that feminist perspectives on
security would grow out of quite different assumptions about the individual, the state, and the
international system. Using feminist literature from various disciplines and approaches I shall now
suggest what some of these perspectives might look like.
Reexamining the Anarchy/Order Distinction
The pervasiveness of internal conflict within states in the latter part of the twentieth century and the
threats that militarized states pose to their own populations have called into question the realist
assumption about the anarchy/order distinction. Critics of realism have also questioned the unitary actor
assumption that renders the domestic affairs of states unproblematic when talking about their
international behavior. Claiming that militarism, sexism, and racism are interconnected, most feminists
would agree that the behavior of individuals and the domestic policies of states cannot be separated from
states' behavior in the international system.70 Feminists call attention to the particular vulnerabilities of
women within states, vulnerabilities that grow out of hierarchical gender relations that are also
interrelated with international politics. Calling into question the notion of the "protected," the National
Organization for Women in their "Resolution on Women in Combat" of September 16, 1990, estimated
that 80-90 percent of casualties due to conflict since World War II have been civilians, the majority of
whom have been women and children. In militarized societies women are particularly vulnerable to rape,
and evidence suggests that domestic violence is higher in military families or in families that include men
with prior military service. Even though most public violence is committed by men against other men, it
is more often women who feel threatened in public places.71 Jill Radford suggests that when women feel
it is unsafe to go out alone, their equal access to job opportunities is limited.72 Studies also show that
violence against women increases during hard economic times; when states prioritize military spending
or find themselves in debt, shrinking resources are often accompanied by violence against women.
Feminist theories draw our attention to another anarchy/order distinction-- the boundary between a public
domestic space protected, at least theoretically, by the rule of law and the private space of the family
where, in many cases, no such legal protection exists. In most states domestic violence is not considered
a concern of the state, and even when it is, law enforcement officials are often unwilling to get involved.
Domestic assaults on women, often seen as "victim precipitated," are not taken as seriously as criminal
assaults. Maria Mies argues that the modernization process in the Third World, besides sharpening class
conflict, has led to an increase in violence against women in the home as traditional social values are
broken down. While poor women probably suffer the most from family violence, a growing women's
movement in India points to an increase in violence against educated middle-class women also, the most
extreme form of which is dowry murder when young brides are found dead in suspicious circumstances.
Eager to marry off their daughters, families make promises for dowries that exceed their means and that
they are subsequently unable to pay.73 In 1982 there were 332 cases of "accidental burning" of women in
New Delhi; many more cases of "dowry deaths" go unreported.74
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Recent studies of family violence in the United States and Western Europe have brought to light similar
problems. When the family is violence-prone, it is frequently beyond the reach of the law; citing a 1978
report of the California Commission on the Status of Women, Pauline Gee documents that in 1978
one-quarter of the murders in the United States occurred within the family, one-half of these being
husband-wife killings. Much of this family violence takes place outside the sanction of the legal system;
it has been estimated that only 2 percent of men who beat their wives or female living partners are ever
prosecuted.75
Maria Mies argues that this line, which demarcates public and private, separates state-regulated violence,
the rule of right for which there are legally sanctioned punishments, and male violence, the rule of might
for which, in many societies, no such legal sanctions exist. The rule of might and the rule of right are
descriptions that have also been used in international relations discourse to distinguish the international
and domestic spheres. By drawing our attention to the frequently forgotten realm of family violence that
is often beyond the reach of the law, these feminists point to the interrelationship of violence and
oppression across all levels of analysis. Feminist perspectives on security would assume that violence,
whether it be in the international, national, or family realm, is interconnected.76 Family violence must be
seen in the context of wider power relations; it occurs within a gendered society in which male power
dominates at all levels.77 If men are traditionally seen as protectors, an important aspect of this role is
protecting women against certain men.78 Any feminist definition of security must therefore include the
elimination of all types of violence, including violence produced by gender relations of domination and
subordination. The achievement of this comprehensive vision of security requires a rethinking of the way
in which citizenship has traditionally been defined, as well as alternative models for describing the
behavior of states in the international system.
Citizenship Redefined
Building on the notion of hegemonic masculinity, the notion of the citizen-warrior depends on a devalued
femininity for its construction. In international relations, this devalued femininity is bound up with myths
about women as victims in need of protection; the protector/protected myth contributes to the
legitimation of a militarized version of citizenship that results in unequal gender relations that can
precipitate violence against women. Certain feminists have called for the construction of an enriched
version of citizenship that would depend less on military values and more on an equal recognition of
women's contributions to society. Such a notion of citizenship cannot come about, however, until myths
that perpetuate views of women as victims rather than agents are eliminated.
One such myth is the association of women with peace, an association that has been invalidated through
considerable evidence of women's support for men's wars in many societies.79 In spite of a gender gap, a
plurality of- women generally support war and national security policies; Bernice Carroll suggests that
the association of women and peace is one that has been imposed on women by their disarmed
condition.80 In the West, this association grew out of the Victorian ideology of women's moral
superiority and the glorification of motherhood. This ideal was expressed by- feminist Charlotte Perkins
Gilman whose book Herland was first serialized in The Forerunner in 1915. Gilman glorified women as
caring and nurturing mothers whose private sphere skills could benefit the world at large.81 Most
turn-of-the-century feminists shared Gilman's ideas. But if the implication of this view -was that women
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were disqualified from participating in the corrupt world of political and economic power by virtue of
their moral superiority, the result could only be the perpetuation of male dominance. Many contemporary
feminists see dangers in the continuation of these essentializing myths that can only result in the
perpetuation of women's subordination and reinforce dualisms that serve to make men more powerful.
The association of femininity with peace lends support to an idealized masculinity that depends on
constructing women as passive victims in need of protection. It also contributes to the claim that women
are naive in matters relating to international politics. An enriched, less militarized notion of citizenship-
cannot be built on such a weak foundation.
While women have often been willing to support men's wars, many women are ambivalent about fighting
in them, often preferring to leave that task to men. Feminists have also been divided on this issue; some
argue, on the grounds of equality, that women must be given equal access to the military, while others
suggest that women must resist the draft in order to promote a politics of peace. In arguing for women's
equal access to the military, Judith Stiehm proposes that a society composed of citizens equally likely to
experience violence and be responsible for its exercise would be stronger and more desirable. Stiehm
claims that if everyone, women and men alike, were protectors, less justification for immoral acts would
be found; with less emphasis on the manliness of war, new questions about its morality could be raised.82
She suggests that women's enhanced role in the military could lead to a new concept of citizen-defender
rather than warrior-patriot.
Just as the notion of a soldier as a wife and mother changes our image of soldiering, citizen-defenders
change our image of war. Citizen-defenders are quite compatible with what Stephen Nathanson, in his
redefinition of the meaning of :patriotism, calls a moderate patriot. Rather than the traditional view of
patriotism built on aggression and war, Nathanson suggests thinking of patriotism as support for one's
own nation while not inflicting harm on others.83 Such patriotism could be consistent with a defensive
strategy in war if everyone were to comply.
Discarding the association between women and pacifism allows us to think of women as activists for the
kind of change needed to achieve the multidimensional security I have already discussed. Even if not all
women are pacifists, peace is an issue that women can support in their various roles as mothers, war
victims, and preservers of states' and the world's good health.84 Women at Greenham Common
demonstrating against the installation of cruise missiles in Britain in 1981 came to see themselves as
strong, brave, and creative-- experiences frequently confined to men.85 The Madres de la Plaza de Mayo,
demonstrating during the1980s in support of those who had disappeared in Argentina during the military
dictatorship, experienced similar empowerment. Sara Ruddick suggests conscripting women in the
interests of peace; Ruddick claims that while caring for children is not "natural" for women, it has been a
womanly practice in most societies and one that she believes is an important resource for peace
politics.86 Ruddick defines maternal thinking as focused on the preservation of life and the growth of
children. Maternal practice requires the peaceful settlement of disputes; since she feels that it is a mode
of thinking to be found in men as well as women, it is one that could be useful for a politics of peace
were it to be validated in the: public realm.
In spite of many women's support for men's wars, a consistent gender gap in voting on defense-related
issues in many countries suggests that women are less supportive of policies that rest on the use of direct
violence. Before the outbreak of the Persian Gulf war in 1990, women in the United States were
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overwhelmingly against the use of force and, for the first time, women alone turned the public opinion
polls against opting for war.87 During the 1980s, when the Reagan administration was increasing defense
budgets, women were less likely to support defense at the expense of social programs, a pattern that, in
the United States, holds true for women's behavior more generally.
Explanations for this gender gap, which in the United States appears to be increasing as time goes on,
range from suggestions that women have not been socialized into the practice of violence to claims that
women are increasingly voting their own interests. While holding down jobs, millions of women also
care for children, the aged, and the sick-- activities that usually take place outside the economy. When
more resources go to the military, additional burdens are placed on such women as public sector
resources for social services shrink. While certain women are able, through access to the military, to give
service to their country, many more are serving in these traditional care-giving roles. A feminist
challenge to the traditional definition of patriotism should therefore question the meaning of service to
one's country.88 In contrast to a citizenship that rests on the assumption that it is more glorious to die
than to live for one's state, Wendy Brown suggests that a more constructive view of citizenship could
center on the courage to sustain life.89 In similar terms, Jean Elshtain asserts the need to move toward a
politics that shifts the focus of political loyalty and identity from sacrifice to responsibility.90 Only when
women's contributions to society are seen as equal to men's can these reconstructed visions of citizenship
come about.
Feminist Perspectives on States' Security-Seeking Behavior
Realists have offered us an instrumental version of states' security-seeking behavior, which, I have
argued, depends on a partial representation of human behavior associated with a stereotypical hegemonic
masculinity. Feminist redefinitions of citizenship allow us to envisage a less militarized version of states'
identities, and feminist theories can also propose alternative models for states' international
security-seeking behavior, extrapolated from a more comprehensive view of human behavior.
Realists use state-of-nature stories as metaphors to describe the insecurity of states in an anarchical
international system. I shall suggest an alternative story, which could equally be applied to the behavior
of individuals in the state) of nature. Although frequently unreported in standard historical accounts, it is
a true story, not a myth, about a state of nature in early nineteenth-century America. Among those
present in the first winter encampment of the 1804-1806 Lewis and Clark expedition into the Northwest
territories was Sacajawea, a member of the Shoshone tribe. Sacajawea )had joined the expedition as the
wife of a French interpreter; her presence was proving invaluable to the security of the expedition's
members, whose task it was to explore uncharted territory and establish contact with the native
inhabitants to inform them of claims to these territories by the United States. Although unanticipated by
its leaders, )the presence of a woman served to assure the native inhabitants that the expedition was
peaceful since the Native Americans assumed that war parties would not include women: the expedition
was therefore safer because it was not armed.91
This story demonstrates that the introduction of women can change the way humans are assumed to
behave in the state of nature. Just as Sacajawea's presence changed the Native American's expectations
about the behavior of intruders into their territory, the introduction of women into our state-of-nature
myths could change the way we think about the behavior of states in the international system. The use of
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the Hobbesian analogy in international relations theory is based on a partial view of human nature that is
stereotypically masculine; a more inclusive perspective would see human nature as both conflictual and
cooperative, containing elements of social reproduction and interdependence as well as domination and
separation. Generalizing from this more comprehensive view of human nature, a feminist perspective
would assume that the potential for international community also exists and that an atomistic, conflictual
view of the inter-national system is only a partial representation of reality. Liberal individualism, the
instrumental rationality of the marketplace, and the defector's self-help approach in Rousseau's stag hunt
are all, in analagous ways, based on a partial masculine model of human behavior.92
These characterizations of human behavior, with their atomistic view of human society, do not assume
the need for interdependence and cooperation.93 Yet states frequently exhibit aspects of cooperative
behavior when they 1engage in diplomatic negotiations. As Cynthia Enloe states, diplomacy runs
smoothly when there is trust and confidence between officials representing governments with conflicting
interests. She suggests that many agreements are negotiated informally in the residences of ambassadors
where the presence of diplomatic wives creates an atmosphere in which trust can best be cultivated.94 As
Enloe concludes, women, often in positions that are unremunerated or undervalued, remain vital to
creating and maintaining trust between men in a hostile world.
Given the interdependent nature of contemporary security threats, new thinking on security has already
assumed that autonomy and self-help, as models for state behavior in the international system, must be
rethought and redefined. 4Many feminists would agree with this, but given their assumption that
interdependence is as much a human characteristic as autonomy, they would question whether autonomy
is even desirable.95 Autonomy is associated with masculinity just as femininity is associated with
interdependence: in her discussion of the birth of modern science in the se4venteenth century, Evelyn
Keller links the rise of what she terms a masculine science with a striving for objectivity, autonomy, and
control.96 Perhaps not coincidentally, the seventeenth century also witnessed the rise of the modern state
system. Since this period, autonomy and separation, importantly associated with the meaning of
sovereignty, ha4ve determined our conception of the national interest. Betty Reardon argues that this
association of autonomy with the national interest tends to blind us to the realities of interdependence in
the present world situation.97 Feminist perspectives would thus assume that striving for attachment is
also part of human nature, which, while it has been4 suppressed by both modern scientific thinking and
the practices of the Western state system, can be reclaimed and revalued in the future.
Evelyn Keller argues for a form of knowledge that she calls "dynamic objectivity... that grants to the
world around us its independent integrity, but does so in a way that remains cognizant of, indeed relies
on, our connectivity with 9that world."98 Keller's view of dynamic objectivity contains parallels with
what Sandra Harding calls an African worldview.99 Harding tells us that the Western liberal notion of
instrumentally rational economic man, similar to the notion of rational political man upon which realism
has based its theoretical investigations, does not make sense in the African worldview where the
individual is seen as part of the social order and as acting within that order rather than upon it. Harding
believes that this view of human behavior has much in common with a feminist perspective; such a view
of human behavior could help us to begin to think from a more global perspective that appr9eciates
cultural diversity but at the same time recognizes a growing interdependence that makes anachronistic
the exclusionary thinking fostered by the state system.
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Besides a reconsideration of autonomy, feminist theories also offer us a different definition of power that
could be useful for thinking about the achievement of the type of positive-sum security that the women at
The Hague and in >Halifax and Nairobi described as desirable. Hannah Arendt, frequently cited by
feminists writing about power, defines power as the human ability to act in concert or action that is taken
with others who share similar concerns.100 This definition of power is similar to that of psychologist
David McClelland's portrayal of female power which he de>scribes as shared rather than assertive.101
Jane Jaquette argues that, since women have had less access to the instruments of coercion (the way
power is usually used in international relations), women have more often used persuasion as a way of
gaining power through coalition building.102 These writers are conceptualizing power as> mutual
enablement rather than domination. While not denying that the way power is frequently used in
international relations comes closer to a coercive mode, thinking about power in these terms is helpful
for devising the cooperative solutions necessary for solving the security threats identified in the Halifax
women's definitions of security.
These different views of human behavior as models for the international behavior of states point us in the
direction of an appreciation of the "other" as a subject whose views are as legitimate as our own, a way
of thinking that has been sadly lacking as states go about providing for their own security. Using feminist
perspectives that are based on the experiences and behavior of women, I have constructed some models
of human behavior that avoid hierarchical dichotomization and that value ambiguity and difference; these
alternative models could stand us in good stead as we seek to construct a less gendered vision of global
security.
Feminist perspectives on national security take us beyond realism's statist representations. They allow us
to see that the realist view of national security is constructed out of a masculinized discourse that, while
it is only a partial view of reality, is taken as universal. Women's definitions of security are multilevel
and multidimensional. Women have defined security as the absence of violence whether it be military,
economic, or sexual. Not until the hierarchical social relations, including gender relations, that have been
hidden by realism's frequently depersonalized discourse are brought to light can we begin to construct a
language of national security that speaks out of the multiple experiences of both women and men. As I
have argued, feminist theory sees all these types of violence as interrelated. I shall turn next to the
economic dimension of this multidimensional perspective on security.
*: I owe the title of this chapter to Kenneth Waltz's book Man, the State, and War. Back.
**: De Beauvoir epigraph from The Second Sex, p. 72. De Beauvoir's analysis suggests that she herself
endorsed this explanation for male superiority; Ruskin epigraph from "Of Queens' Gardens," quoted in
Carole Pateman, "Feminist Critiques of the Public/Private Dichotomy," in Benn and Gaus, Public and
Private in Social Life, p. 291; Fussell epigraph quoted by Anna Quindlen in The New York Times,
February 7, 1991, p. A25. Back.
Note 1: Waltz, Theory of International Politics, p. 102. Back.
Note 2: While heads of state, all men, discussed the "important" issues in world politics at the Group of
Seven meeting in London in July 1991, Barbara Bush and Princess Diana were pictured on the "CBS
Evening News" (July 17, 1991) meeting with British AIDS patients. Back.
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Note 3: By relying on the work of these two authors I do not mean to slight others in the realist tradition.
Realism is an old and rich tradition in international relations, the roots of which go back to Thucydides
and the classical Greeks. While this chapter will concentrate on the work of two American scholars, the
European influence on realism has been considerable. Important realist scholars in the European tradition
include Raymond Aron, Martin Wight, Hedley Bull, and Stanley Hoffmann. Morgenthau himself was of
European background. Back.
Note 4: Waltz, Man, the State, and War, p. 167. Since Waltz's frequently cited discussion of Rousseau's
stag hunt was written, some neorealists have tried to reinterpret it in less dire terms, while others have
criticized the adequacy of Waltz's rendering of Rousseau. See, for example, Snidal, "Relative Gains and
the Pattern of International Cooperation," and Williams, "Rousseau, Realism, and Realpolitik." Back.
Note 5: The term security dilemma is attributed to John Herz. My analysis of the security dilemma relies
on Waltz, Theory of International Politics, pp. 186-187. Back.
Note 6: Morgenthau, Politics Among Nations, p. 113. Back.
Note 7: Waltz, Theory of International Politics, pp. 106-107. Back.
Note 8: Ibid., pp. 170-171. Back.
Note 9: Morgenthau, Politics Among Nations, ch. 1. Back.
Note 10: While in Theory of International Politics Waltz favors a systems level of analysis, in his earlier
work Man, the State, and War, he analyzes the way in which all three levels relate to international
conflict. For further discussion of levels of analysis see J. David Singer, "The Level-of-Analysis
Problem," in Rosenau, ed., International Politics and Foreign Policy. More recently, Robert North has
conceived of the natural environment as a fourth level of analysis. See North, War, Peace, Survival.
Back.
Note 11: Waltz, Theory of International Politics, ch. 6. Back.
Note 12: Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science, p. 130. Back.
Note 13: For example, see Haraway, Primate Visions, ch. 1. Considering scientific practice from the
perspective of the way its factual findings are narrated, Haraway provocatively explores how scientific
theories produce and are embedded in particular kinds of stories. This allows her to challenge the
neutrality and objectivity of scientific facts. She suggests that texts about primates can be read as science
fictions about race, gender, and nature. Back.
Note 14: Morgenthau, Politics Among Nations, p. 34. Back.
Note 15: Morgenthau does talk about dominating mothers-in-law, but as feminist research has suggested,
it is generally men, legally designated as heads of households in most societies, who hold the real power
even in the family and certainly with respect to the family's interaction with the public sphere. Back.
Note 16: For an extended discussion of Morgenthau's "political man," see Tickner, "Hans Morgenthau's
Principles of Political Realism. " In neorealism's depersonalized structural analysis, Morgenthau's
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depiction of human nature slips out of sight. Back.
Note 17: Brown, Manhood and Politics, pp. 43-59. Back.
Note 18: Jean Elshtain suggests that in Athens and Sparta this notion of heroic sacrifice was extended to
women who died in childbirth producing citizens for the state. See Elshtain, "Sovereignty, Identity,
Sacrifice," in Peterson, ed., Gendered States. Back.
Note 19: Brown, Manhood and Politics, ch. 5. Back.
Note 20: Pitkin, Fortune Is a Woman, p. 22. Back.
Note 21: Brown, Manhood and Politics, p. 82. Back.
Note 22: Pitkin, Fortune Is a Woman, ch. 6. Back.
Note 23: Brown, Manhood and Politics, pp. 80-88. Back.
Note 24: Machiavelli, The Prince and the Discourses, p. 94. Back.
Note 25: For example, he states in the Art of War, book 6, that women must not be allowed into a
military camp, for they "make soldiers rebellious and useless." Quoted in Pitkin, Fortune Is a Woman, p.
72. Back.
Note 26: Kathleen Jones, "Dividing the Ranks: Women and the Draft," ch. 6 in Elshtain and Tobias, eds.,
Women, Militarism, and War, p. 126. Back.
Note 27: Gerzon, A Choice of Heroes, p. 31. Back.
Note 28: A New York Times interview, January 22, 1991, p. A12, with Sgt. Cheryl Stewart serving in the
Gulf, revealed that she was close to divorce because her husband's ego had been bruised by remaining
home with the couple's children. Back.
Note 29: Elshtain, Women and War, p. 207. Elshtain is citing a study by the military historian S. L. A.
Marshall. This figure is, however, disputed by other analysts. Back.
Note 30: Stiehm, "The Protected, the Protector, the Defender," in Stiehm, Women and Men's Wars, p.
371. Back.
Note 31: Tobias, "Shifting Heroisms: The Uses of Military Service in Politics," ch. 8 in Elshtain and
Tobias, eds., Women, Militarism, and War. Tobias uses Daniel Quayle as an example of a politician who,
in the 1988 U.S. election, suffered from the perception that he had avoided military service. Back.
Note 32: New York Times, February, 11, 1991, p. A12. In an interview with American troops assembling
bombs in the Saudi desert during the 1991 Persian Gulf war, Dan Rather on the "CBS Evening News,"
(February 19, 1991) described how each bomb bore a personal message to Saddam Hussein. It has been
customary in military discourse to refer to the missiles themselves as "he." Nuclear weapons have even
been given boys' or men's names: the bombs dropped over Nagasaki and Hiroshima were nicknamed Fat
Man and Little Boy. Back.
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Note 33: In a military briefing on the last day of the Persian Gulf war, General Norman Schwarzkopf,
when describing the allied ground campaign, referred to a "Hail Mary" move in football. "McNeil/Lehrer
Report," February 27, 1991. Back.
Note 34: Games Nations Play is the title of a popular textbook in international relations by John Spanier.
To describe the "game" of international relations, Raymond Aron used the metaphor of a soccer game
without defined boundaries, mutually agreed-upon rules, or an impartial referee to enforce them. See
Aron, Peace and War, pp. 8-10. Back.
Note 35: Morgenthau, Politics Among Nations, p. 353. Back.
Note 36: Ashley, "The Poverty of Neorealism," ch. 9 in Keohane, ed., Neorealism and Its Critics, p. 258.
Back.
Note 37: Elshtain, Women and War, p. 91. Back.
Note 38: Tilly, "Reflections on the History of European State-Making" ch. 1 in Tilly, ed., The Formation
of National States in Western Europe. Back.
Note 39: Soon after the outbreak of the Persian Gulf war in 1991, the Boston Globe (January 22, 1991, p.
1) reported that the war had dramatically boosted Americans' self-image: before the war 32 percent of
Americans felt goodabout the country; after two days of fighting the figure nearly doubled to 62 percent.
Figures are from a Gallup poll. Back.
Note 40: Speaking of the Persian Gulf war, Gordon Adams of the Defense Budget Project said: "It's not
cheap, but it is a pretty small price tag to pay for a pretty large effort.=&.|.|. Other people will tell you, 'I
wanted to spend that on child care' but that is not what is going on here." Boston Globe, January 19,
1991, p. 1. Back.
Note 41: The study also revealed a high rate of sexual harassment of women, a condition that is
widespread in the military services. Back.
Note 42: Stiehm, Arms and the Enlisted Woman, p. 174. Back.
Note 43: For example, Cynthia Enloe asserts that military nurses suffer from invisibility; the army does
not want them to talk because they see the horror of war in the wounded. Enloe, Does Khaki Become
You?, ch. 4. The 1991 Gulf war intensified the debate in the United States about the suitability of women
for combat. In May 1991 the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill, sponsored by Representative
Patricia Schroeder, that allows (but does not require) women Air Force pilots to fly in combat. Boston
Globe, May 23, 1991, p. 1. Back.
Note 44: Newsweek, July 1, 1991. Back.
Note 45: Cohn, "Sex and Death in the Rational World of Defense Intellectuals." Back.
Note 46: Cohn, "Emasculating America's Linguistic Deterrent," ch. 8 in Harris and King, eds., Rocking
the Ship of State, p. 154. Back.
Note 47: Ashley, "Untying the Sovereign State," p. 230. Back.
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Note 48: Hobbes, Leviathan, part 1, ch. 13, quoted in Vasquez, ed., Classics of International Relations,
pp. 213-215. Back.
Note 49: Pateman, The Sexual Contract, p. 41. Back.
Note 50: Flax, "Political Philosophy and the Patriarchal Unconscious: A Psychoanalytic Perspective on
Epistemology and Metaphysics," in Harding and Hintikka, eds., Discovering Reality, pp. 245-281. Back.
Note 51: Di Stephano, "Masculinity as Ideology in Political Theory." Carole Pateman has disputed some
of Di Stephano's assumptions about Hobbes's characterizations of women and the family in the state of
nature. But this does not deny the fact that Di Stephano's characterization of men is the one used by
realists in their depiction of the international system. See Pateman, "|'God Hath Ordained to Man a
Helper': Hobbes, Patriarchy, and Conjugal Right." Back.
Note 52: Critics of realism have questioned whether the Hobbesian analogy fits the international system.
See, for example, Beitz, Political Theory and International Relations, pp. 35-50. Back.
Note 53: Pitkin, Fortune Is a Woman, p. 127. Back.
Note 54: Ruddick, Maternal Thinking, p. 152. Back.
Note 55: Higonnet et al., Behind the Lines, introduction. Back.
Note 56: Elshtain, Women and War, p. 194. Back.
Note 57: Ibid., p. 168. Back.
Note 58: Enloe, Bananas, Beaches, and Bases, pp. 48-49. Back.
Note 59: Hunt, Ideology and U.S. Foreign Policy, pp. 58-62. Back.
Note 60: Ibid., p. 164. Back.
Note 61: At Hiroshima 90 percent of the victims were civilians. The military's answer to this problem is
the production of "smart bombs," which can be aimed precisely at military targets. Given the
ever-increasing level of destruction of modern technologies and escalating arms acquisitions, this does
not seem like the most stable way to provide security. Back.
Note 62: Common Security, introduction by Olof Palme, pp. xi-xvii. The end of the Cold War has not
eliminated these dangers. The fear of accidental firing of strategic nuclear weapons belonging to the
United States and nuclear states of the former Soviet Union remains. Nuclear proliferation and the spread
of other weapons of mass destruction also contribute to the fear of use of these weapons, which,
paradoxically, are supposed to increase security. Back.
Note 63: Wilson and Wallensteen, Major Armed Conflicts in 1987. This report notes that at the end of
1987 only one of thirty-six major armed conflicts was taking place outside the Third World. Back.
Note 64: Jackson and Rosberg, "Why Africa's Weak States Persist," p. 23. Back.
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Note 65: Common Security: A Blueprint for Survival, p. xiii. Back.
Note 66: Addams et al., Women at The Hague, pp. 150ff. Back.
Note 67: Runyan, "Feminism, Peace, and International Politics," ch. 6. Back.
Note 68: "Forward-looking Strategies for the Advancement of Women Towards the Year 2000." Quoted
in Pietil;aua and Vickers, Making Women Matter, pp. 46-47. Back.
Note 69: Boulding, "Women in Peace Studies" in Kramarae and Spender, eds., The Knowledge
Explosion. Back.
Note 70: Reardon, Sexism and the War System, ch. 1. Back.
Note 71: Connell, Gender and Power, p. 129, portrays streets as "zones of occupation" by men, there
being no such thing as "women's streets." Back.
Note 72: Radford, "Policing Male Violence-- Policing Women" ch. 3 in Hanmer and Maynard, eds.,
Women, Violence, and Social Control, p. 33. Radford reports that in a survey conducted in the London
borough of Wandsworth in 1983-84, 88 percent of women said their neighborhood was not safe for
women during the night, and 25 percent found it unsafe during the day; large numbers said they went out
only when absolutely necessary. Back.
Note 73: Mies, Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale, p. 147. Back.
Note 74: Brock-Utne, Feminist Perspectives on Peace and Peace Education, p. 50. Back.
Note 75: Gee, "Ensuring Police Protection for Battered Women," p. 555. Back.
Note 76: In its definition of peace already discussed, the Forward-looking Strategy document, adopted at
Nairobi in 1985, points to this interrelationship between all types of violence. See Pietil;aua and Vickers,
Making Women Matter, pp. 46-47. Back.
Note 77: Breines and Gordon, "The New Scholarship on Family Violence," pp. 492-493. Back.
Note 78: Stiehm, Arms and the Enlisted Woman, p. 228. Back.
Note 79: See Elshtain, Women and War, ch. 3. Back.
Note 80: Carroll, "Feminism and Pacifism: Historical and Theoretical Connections," in Pierson, ed.,
Women and Peace, pp. 2-28. Back.
Note 81: Margaret Hobbs, "The Perils of 'Unbridled Masculinity': Pacifist Elements in the Feminist and
Socialist Thought of Charlotte Perkins Gilman," in Pierson, ed., Women and Peace, pp. 149-169. Back.
Note 82: Stiehm, Women and Men's Wars, p. 367. Back.
Note 83: Nathanson, "In Defense of 'Moderate Patriotism,'|" p. 538. Back.
Note 84: Elshtain and Tobias, eds., Women, Militarism, and War, p. xi. Back.
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Note 85: Segal, Is the Future Female?, p. 165. Back.
Note 86: Ruddick, "The Rationality of Care," ch. 11 in Elshtain and Tobias, eds., Women, Militarism,
and War. Back.
Note 87: The New York Times of December 12, 1990 (p. A35) reported that while men were about
evenly split on attacking Iraqi forces in Kuwait, women were 73 percent against and 22 percent in favor.
Back.
Note 88: Suzanne Gordon, "Another Enemy," Boston Globe, March 8, 1991, p. 15. Back.
Note 89: Brown, Manhood and Politics, p. 206. Back.
Note 90: Elshtain, "Sovereignty, Identity, Sacrifice," in Peterson, ed., Gendered States. Back.
Note 91: I am grateful to Michael Capps, historian at the Lewis and Clark Museum in St. Louis,
Missouri, for this information. The story of Sacajawea is told in one of the museum's exhibits. Back.
Note 92: In Man, the State, and War, Waltz argues that "in the stag-hunt example, the will of the
rabbit-snatcher was rational and predictable from his own point of view" (p. 183), while "in the early
state of nature, men were sufficiently dispersed to make any pattern of cooperation unnecessary" (p.
167). Neorealist revisionists, such as Snidal (see note 4 of this chapter), do not question the masculine
bias of the stag hunt metaphor. Like Waltz and Rousseau, they also assume the autonomous, adult male
(unparented and in an environment without women or children) in their discussion of the stag hunt; they
do not question the rationality of the rabbit-snatching defector or the restrictive situational descriptions
implied by their payoff matrices. Transformations in the social nature of an interaction are very hard to
represent using such a model. Their reformulation of Waltz's position is instead focused on the
exploration of different specifications of the game payoff in less conflictual ways (i.e., as an assurance
game) and on inferences concerning the likely consequences of relative gain-seeking behavior in a
gamelike interaction with more than two (equally autonomous and unsocialized) players. Back.
Note 93: For a feminist interpretation that disputes this assumption see Mona Harrington, "What Exactly
Is Wrong with the Liberal State as an Agent of Feminist Change?," in Peterson, ed., Gendered States.
Back.
Note 94: Enloe, Bananas, Beaches, and Bases, ch. 5. Enloe points out that women, although very
underrepresented in the U.S. State Department, make up half the professional staff of the Office of the
U.S. Trade Representative. Trade negotiations are an arena in which negotiating skills are particularly
valuable, and Enloe believes that women are frequently assigned to these positions because the opposing
party is more likely to trust them. Back.
Note 95: In her analysis of difference in men's and women's conversational styles, Deborah Tannen
describes life from a male perspective as a struggle to preserve independence and avoid failure. In
contrast, for women life is a struggle to preserve intimacy and avoid isolation. Tannen claims that all
humans need both intimacy and independence but that women tend to focus on the former and men on
the latter. Tannen, You Just Don't Understand, pp. 25-26. Back.
Note 96: Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science, ch. 3. Back.
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Note 97: Reardon, Sexism and the War System, p. 88. Back.
Note 98: Keller, Gender and Science, p. 117. Back.
Note 99: Harding, The Science Question in Feminism, ch. 7. Back.
Note 100: Arendt, On Violence, p. 44. Back.
Note 101: McClelland, "Power and the Feminine Role," in McClelland, Power: The Inner Experience,
ch. 3. Back.
Note 102: Jaquette, "Power as Ideology: A Feminist Analysis," in Stiehm, Women's Views of the
Political World of Men, ch. 2. Back.
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Gender in International Relations: Feminist Perspectives on Achieving Global Security, by J. Ann Tickner
3. Three Models of Man: Gendered Perspectives
on Global Economic Security *
The servant role of women is critical for the expansion of consumption in the modern
economy. J. K. Galbraith
Economic development, that magic formula, devised sincerely to move poor nations
out of poverty, has become women's worst enemy. Devaki Jain
The majority [of women] still lag far behind men in power, wealth and opportunity.
Javier Perez de Cuellar **
Since their birth in seventeenth-century Europe, states have engaged in political practices designed to
promote their economic security. Trade and immigration barriers have been erected at national
boundaries to protect domestic industry and domestic workers. Huge economic inequalities in the world
are sustained through the protection of these state boundaries. Mercantilism, the leading school of
economic theory in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe, prescribed state intervention to promote
economic self-sufficiency and favorable trade balances as a way of assuring nations' wealth, power, and
military potential. With the establishment of economic liberalism as the leading school of economic
theory in the nineteenth century, however, national growth and wealth were seen as fostered by freer
modes of investment, migration, and exchange.
In the nineteenth century, politics and economics became separate academic disciplines. This separation,
encouraged by the strong anti-Marxism of liberal economics, was an important influence on
twentieth-century Western international relations scholarship, which largely neglected economic
relations between states until the 1970s. When economic issues surfaced, they were relegated to matters
of "low politics" as the "high politics" of national security and war took precedence.
In the 1970s, however, international political economy emerged as a more central topic of concern in
mainstream Western international relations scholarship. The fact that economic relations were central to
international politics, as well as the political implications of states' international economic behavior,
could no longer be ignored. After thirty years of nuclear stalemate, military relations between the great
powers were frozen; relations between advanced capitalist states, who were also partners in the Western
alliance and therefore unlikely military adversaries, were defined primarily in economic terms.
The end of the post-World War II era of fixed exchange rates and international monetary management in
the early1970s, the erosion of the dollar as the key currency in the international monetary order, which
signaled the relative decline in the power of the United States in the world economy, and the rise of states
such as Germany and Japan, whose power depended on economic rather than military might, caused
renewed interest in political economy among scholars studying advanced capitalist states. A global
recession that, it was believed, was connected to the rise in the price of oil in the early 1970s, and the
demands for a New International Economic Order (N.I.E.O.) by Third World states put relations between
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North and South more centrally on the agenda of international relations. Contemporary Marxist theories
about the unequal allocation of wealth in a capitalist world economy began to be taken more seriously by
certain Western international relations scholars.
At the same time, peace researchers began to question whether the economic security of the state, so
important to seventeenth- and eighteenth-century mercantilists, was synonymous with the economic
security of its citizens. In many parts of the Third World, the failure of development strategies to solve
problems of poverty called for an examination of hierarchical political relations between North and South
as well as the uneven distributive effects of the world capitalist economy. The legitimacy of states that
failed to meet the basic material needs of their citizens began to be questioned. In many states, military
budgets and arms purchases were taking priority over the economic welfare of individuals. The term
structural violence was used to denote the economic insecurity of individuals whose life expectancy was
reduced, not by the direct violence of war but by domestic and international structures of political and
economic oppression. Peace researchers began to define security in terms of "positive peace," a peace
that included economic security as well as physical safety.
Depending on their normative orientation and area of concern, contemporary scholars of international
political economy have used different approaches to investigate these various concerns. These
approaches fit broadly into what Robert Gilpin has described as the three constituting ideologies of
international political economy: liberalism, economic nationalism, and Marxism. 1 Gilpin defines an
ideology as a belief system that includes both scientific explanations and normative prescriptions. Since
none of these approaches discusses gender, we must assume that their authors believe them to be gender
neutral, meaning that they claim that the interaction between states and markets, as Gilpin defines
political economy, can be understood without reference to gender distinctions. Feminists would disagree
with this claim; as I argued in chapter 1, ignoring gender distinctions hides a set of social and economic
relations characterized by inequality between men and women. In order to understand how these unequal
relationships affect the workings of the world economy-- and their consequences for both women and
men-- models of international political economy that make gender relations explicit must be constructed.
This chapter will analyze these three ideologies or models in order to see whether they are indeed gender
neutral with respect both to their scientific explanations and to their normative prescriptions. The
individual, the state, and class-- the central units of analysis for each of these models, respectively-- will
be examined to see whether they evidence a masculine bias in the way they are described and in the
interests they represent. If this is the case, then it is legitimate to ask whether and how gender has
circumscribed each model's understanding of the workings of the world economy; if a masculine bias is
apparent in these representations, we must ask whether the normative preferences and policy
prescriptions of each of these perspectives will promote the economic security of men more than women.
Having critiqued each model from the perspective of gender, I shall offer some feminist perspectives on
international political economy. Just as women have been absent from the field of international relations,
the few feminists who write about economics claim that their discipline has rendered women completely
invisible. The field of economics has shown little interest in household production and volunteer work, or
in women's particular problems and accomplishments in a market economy. 2 A growing literature on
women and development has been marginalized from mainstream theories of political and economic
development. Since very little literature on women and international political economy exists, once again
I shall be drawing on feminist literature from other disciplines and approaches. Common themes in these
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various feminist approaches suggest that feminist perspectives on international political economy would
start with assumptions about the individual, the state, and class that are very different from those at the
foundation of Gilpin's three ideologies.
Liberalism
Economic liberalism, while it has distanced itself from political issues, has served as the foundation for
the dominant approach to Western international political economy in the twentieth century. Its
beginnings as a school of thought are associated with the work of Adam Smith whose Wealth of Nations,
published in 1776, first promoted the idea of the efficiency of the market in the allocation of goods and
services and the division of labor as the best way of increasing productivity and wealth. Critical of
mercantilism, which supported government involvement in the economy, liberals believe that politics and
economics should be separated. Goods and services are best distributed through the price mechanism and
the laws of supply and demand, free from government interference. Smith's arguments about the benefits
of the division of labor were carried into the international sphere by nineteenth-century British economist
David Ricardo, who claimed that countries could best promote their economic welfare by specializing in
goods they could produce most cheaply or "efficiently" and trading them on the international market.
Liberals believe not only that free trade will result in the maximization of global wealth and human
welfare but also that it will lead to peace and cooperation between states.
Although its proponents present it as a scientific theory with universal and timeless applications,
liberalism has generally been the approach preferred by scholars and policymakers from rich and
powerful capitalist states. Just as Britain was committed to economic liberalism during its period of
hegemony in the nineteenth century, the United States was the strongest proponent of liberalism in the
post-World War II era during its period of political and economic supremacy.
Liberal theory takes the individual as the basic unit of analysis: according to liberals, human beings are
by nature economic animals driven by rational self-interest. "Rational economic man" is assumed to be
motivated by the laws of profit maximization. He is highly individualistic, pursuing his own economic
goals in the market without any social obligation to the community of which he is a part. 3 Liberals
believe that even though this instrumentally rational market behavior is driven by selfish profit motives,
it produces outcomes that are efficient or beneficial for everyone-- though they acknowledge that not
everyone will benefit to the same extent. Economic security is best assured by economic growth, the
benefits of which will trickle down and increase the income of the entire population. The detrimental
effects of economic growth and market behavior, such as dwindling resources and environmental
damage, are generally not considered.
Feminist Critiques of Liberalism
Feminist critiques of liberalism should begin with an examination of "rational economic man," a
construct that, while it extrapolates from roles and behaviors associated with certain Western men and
assumes characteristics that correspond to the definition of hegemonic masculinity discussed in chapter
1, has been used by liberal economists to represent the behavior of humanity as a whole. Nancy Hartsock
suggests that rational economic man, appearing coincidentally with the birth of modern capitalism, is a
social construct based on the reduction of a variety of human passions to a desire for economic gain. 4 Its
claim to universality across time and culture must therefore be questioned. For example, Sandra
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Harding's African worldview, discussed in chapter 2, in which the economic behavior of individuals is
embedded within a social order, is a communal orientation seen as "deviant" by neoclassical economic
theory; yet it is one that represents a different type of economic behavior specific to other cultures. As
Harding claims, it also contains some striking parallels with the worldview of many Western women. 5
Hartsock and Harding are thus claiming that the highly individualistic, competitive market behavior of
rational economic man could not necessarily be assumed as a norm if women's experiences, or the
experiences of individuals in noncapitalist societies, were taken as the prototype for human behavior.
Women in their reproductive and maternal roles do not conform to the behavior of instrumental
rationality. Much of women's work in the provision of basic needs takes place outside the market, in
households or in the subsistence sector of Third World economies. Moreover, when women enter the
market economy, they are disproportionately represented in the caring professions as teachers, nurses, or
social workers, vocations that are more likely to be chosen on the basis of the values and expectations
that are often emphasized in female socialization rather than on the basis of profit maximization. If this is
the case, we must conclude that many women's, as well as some men's, motivations and behavior cannot
be explained using a model of instrumental rationality; rather, these behaviors call for models based on
different understandings of the meaning of rationality.
Rational economic man is extrapolated from assumptions about human nature that originate in British
liberal political theory of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Rational economic man bears many
similarities to Hobbesian man, whose aggressive passions have been tamed by the rational pursuit of
profit. Liberal contract theories about individuals' origins, such as that of Hobbes's, depict a state of
nature where individuals exist prior to and apart from the community; they come together, not out of any
desire for community, but out of the need for a protected environment in which they can conduct their
economic transactions more securely without the threat of physical violence. Hartsock argues that, given
its dependence solely on economic exchange, any notion of community in liberal theory is fragile and
instrumental. She claims, however, that this liberal assumption, that the behavior of individuals can be
explained apart from society, is unrealistic since individuals have always been a part of society. 6
Although early liberal theorists were explicit in their assertion that their models of human behavior
applied to men, not women, this distinction has since been lost, because contemporary liberals assume
that humanity as a whole behaves in the same way. Feminist critics take issue with this theory of human
behavior, asserting that it is biased toward a masculine representation. Harding claims that, for women,
the self is defined through relationship with others rather than apart from others. 7 Alison Jaggar argues
that liberalism's individualistic portrayal of human nature has placed excessive value on the mind at the
expense of the body. In our sexual division of labor, men have dominated the intellectual fields while
women have been assigned the "domestic" tasks necessary for physical survival; Jaggar concludes that,
given this traditional sexual division of labor, women would be unlikely either to develop a theory of
human nature that ignored human interdependence or to formulate a conception of rationality that
stressed individual autonomy. If the need for interdependence were taken as the starting point,
community and cooperation would not be seen as puzzling and problematic when we begin to think
about alternative ways to define rationality. 8
Generalizing from rational economic man to the world economy, liberals believe that world welfare is
maximized by allowing market forces to operate unimpeded and goods and investment to flow as freely
as possible across state boundaries according to the laws of comparative advantage. Critics of liberalism
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question this belief in openness and interdependence, claiming that it falsely depoliticizes exchange
relationships and masks hidden power structures. They challenge the notion of mutual gains from
exchange by focusing on the unequal distribution of gains across states, classes, and factors of
production, and argue that in fact gains accrue disproportionately to the most powerful states or
economic actors. For example, critics of liberalism would argue that liberal economic theory obscures the
unequal power relations between capital and labor: since capital is mobile across interstate boundaries
and controls strategic decisions about investment and production, it is being rewarded disproportionately
to labor, a trend that was on the rise in the 1980s when labor was becoming increasingly marginalized in
matters of economic policy. 9
If capital is being rewarded disproportionately to labor in the world economy, then men are being
rewarded disproportionately to women. A 1981 report to the U.N. Committee on the Status of Women
avers that while women represent half the global population and one-third of the paid labor force and are
responsible for two-thirds of all working hours, they receive only one-tenth of world income and own
less that 1 percent of world property. 10 While much of women's work is performed outside the formal
economy, these data suggest that women are not being rewarded to the same extent as men even when
they enter the market economy. Although no systematic data on men's and women's incomes on a
worldwide scale exists, an International Labor Office study of manufacturing industries in twenty
countries, conducted in the mid-1980s, showed that women's wages were less than men's in each case. 11
Earning lower wages and owning an insignificant proportion of the world's capital puts women at an
enormous disadvantage in terms of power and wealth and thus contributes to their economic insecurity.
While feminist economists are just beginning to explore the differential effects of the operation of the
market economy on men and women, one area where these effects have been examined in some detail is
in studies of Third World women and development. 12 Liberal modernization theory, a body of literature
that grew out of assumptions that free markets and private investment could best promote economic
growth in the Third World, saw women's relative "backwardness" as the irrational persistence of
traditional attitudes. For example, the United Nations' Decade for the Advancement of Women (1975-85)
assumed that women's problems in the Third World were related to insufficient participation in the
process of modernization and development. In 1970, however, Esther Boserup, the first of many women
scholars to challenge this assumption, claimed that in many parts of the colonial and postcolonial world,
the position of rural women actually declined when they became assimilated into the global market
economy. 13 Women's marginalization was exacerbated by the spread of Western capitalism and culture.
In the preindependence period, Western colonizers rarely had any sympathy for the methods women used
to cultivate crops; assuming that men would be more efficient as agricultural producers, they attempted
to replace women's cultivation practices with those of men.
Boserup and others claim that development aid in the postcolonial period has actually reduced the status
of women relative to men. After World War II, Western development experts taught new techniques for
the improvement of agriculture to men who were able to generate income from cash crops. When land
enters the market, land tenure often passes into the hands of men. Hence women's access to land and
technology actually often decreases as land reform is instituted and agriculture is modernized. Land
reform, traditionally thought to be a vital prerequisite for raising agricultural productivity, frequently
reduces women's control over traditional use rights and gives titles to male heads of households. During
the early years of development assistance, the concept of male head of household was incorporated into
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foreign assistance programs; according to the traditional Western sexual division of labor, imposed on
societies with quite different social norms, women were seen as child rearers and homemakers, thus
further marginalizing their productive activities.
The mechanization of agriculture in the Third World has also reduced women's control over agricultural
production as men have taken over the mechanized part of the production process. The modernization of
agriculture, which often leads to a dualism in agricultural production, tends to leave women behind in the
traditional sector. 14 But in spite of mechanization, which remains largely in the hands of men, women
continue to produce more than half the world's food: in sub-Saharan Africa, women are responsible for
more than 80 percent of agricultural production. While women make up the majority of subsistence
farmers, their activities have become less socially valued as cash cropping increases. Women's
agricultural knowledge has generally been considered "unscientific" and therefore neglected in
development programs. 15 Development experts talk to men, even when projects being designed may be
more relevant for women's productive activities. 16
While agriculture became more central to development planning in the 1970s, early Western liberal
development strategies focused on industrialization, claiming that the economic growth it generated
would trickle down to all sectors of the economy. As women were channeled into low-paying activities
in industrial sectors of the Third World, the urban division of labor along gender lines became even more
hierarchical than in subsistence agriculture. Since women are rarely trained as skilled industrial workers,
the skills gap in many urban areas has increased, with women taking up domestic service or unskilled
factory jobs. States that have adopted successful export-oriented industrial policies, such as South Korea,
Taiwan, and Hong Kong, have relied to a considerable extent on unskilled women workers. Certain states
have attracted overseas corporations by offering a large pool of docile young female laborers; these
young women are frequently fired when they marry, try to unionize, or claim other benefits. 17 Cynthia
Enloe claims that as long as young women working in "Export Processing Zones" are encouraged to see
themselves as daughters or prospective wives earning pin money rather than as workers their labor will
be cheapened and women will have little opportunity to move into more skilled positions. 18
Liberals, believing in the benefits of free trade, have generally supported export-led strategies of
development. But since states that have opted for export-led strategies have often experienced increased
inequalities in income, and since women are disproportionately clustered at the bottom of the economic
scale, such strategies may have a particularly negative effect on women. The harsh effects of structural
adjustment policies imposed by the International Monetary Fund on Third World debtor nations fall
disproportionately on women as providers of basic needs, as social welfare programs in areas of health,
nutrition, and housing are cut. When government subsidies or funds are no longer available, women in
their role as unpaid homemakers and care providers must often take over the provision of these basic
welfare needs. 19 Harsh economic conditions in the 1980s saw an increased number of Third World
women going overseas as domestic servants and remitting their earnings to families they left behind.
These feminist studies of Third World development and its effects on women are suggesting that liberal
strategies to promote economic growth and improve world welfare that rely on market forces and free
trade may have a differential impact on men and women. Since women's work often takes place outside
the market economy, a model based on instrumentally rational market behavior does not capture all the
economic activities of women. Therefore we cannot assume that the prescriptions generated by such a
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model will be as beneficial to women's economic security as they are to men's.
Economic Nationalism
The intellectual roots of the contemporary nationalist approach to international political economy date
back to the mercantilist school of sixteenth-, seventeenth-, and eighteenth-century Europe, the period that
coincided with the rise of the modern state. The contemporary version of economic nationalism is quite
similar to the realist school of international relations discussed in chapter 2 in terms of its assumptions
about the international system and its explanations of the behavior of states. Just as liberalism is the
ideology of rich and powerful states, economic nationalism became popular in the United States in the
1970s, at the same time its proponents became concerned with what they perceived as America's
hegemonic decline. 20 The economic nationalist approach takes the state and its behavior in the
international system as its basic unit of analysis. All economic nationalists subscribe to the primacy of
the state, of national security, and of military power in the organization and functioning of the
international system. While not denying that an open world economy could be mutually beneficial if all
states adhered to liberal principles, economic nationalists, like realists, believe that states must act to
protect their own economic interests lest they fall prey to others' self-seeking behavior in a conflictual
international system lacking any international governance.
While contemporary economic nationalism became popular in the United States as a critique of the
impracticality of liberal strategies in an illiberal world, its explanations for the behavior of states are
quite similar to liberals' explanations of the behavior of rational economic man. States are assumed to be
behaving as instrumentally rational profit maximizers, pursuing wealth, power, and autonomy in an
international system devoid of any sense of community. In a conflictual world, states are striving to be
economically self-sufficient. Their participation in the world economy is an attempt to create an
international division of labor and resource allocation favorable to their own interests and those of groups
within their national boundaries. Arguments against extensive economic interdependence are justified in
the name of national security. Strategic domestic industries are to be given protection especially when
they produce military-related goods. National security and national interest are thus the overriding goals
of policy. 21 Like their seventeenth-century mercantilist predecessors, contemporary economic
nationalists believe that, where necessary, the workings of the market must be subordinated to the
interests of the state.
Feminist Critiques of Economic Nationalism
Feminist critiques of the economic nationalist approach should begin by examining the state, the central
unit of analysis. If, as I argued in the previous chapter, the state is a gendered construct with respect both
to its historical origins and to its contemporary manifestations, we might assume that prescriptions for
maximizing state power could work to promote the economic welfare of men more than women.
The consolidation of the modern state system and the rise of modern science, from which the Western
social sciences trace their origins, both occurred in the seventeenth century-- a time of dramatic social,
economic, and political upheaval well documented in Western history. Less well documented is the fact
that the seventeenth century was also associated with the intellectual origins of Western feminism.
According to Juliet Mitchell, this is not coincidental; women in the seventeenth century saw themselves
as a distinct sociological group completely excluded from the new society that was rising out of the
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medieval order. She cites seventeenth-century feminists such as Mary Astell, who lamented that the new
spirit of equality did not apply to women. 22
Economic historians have similarly celebrated the rise of a new economic order, the beginnings of the
drive to modernization and a market system that was to generate the unprecedented wealth of modern
capitalism. But at such moments of great historical change usually identified with progress, feminist
historians claim that women are often left behind economically or even made worse off. Just as Third
World women have been marginalized through the infusion of Western gender roles into non-Western
cultures, concepts of gender and the gender linking of productive roles were shifting in the seventeenth
century in ways that were marginalizing women's labor in Europe itself. In the seventeenth century,
definitions of male and female were becoming polarized in ways that were suited to the growing division
between work and home required by early capitalism but not necessarily to the interests of women. The
notion of "housewife" began to place women's work in the private domestic sphere as opposed to the
public world of the market inhabited by rational economic man. According to R. W. Connell, the notion
of the "home" did not exist in Europe before the eighteenth century. As a combination of technology and
industrial politics gradually pushed women out of core industries during the Industrial Revolution,
gendered concepts of the "breadwinner" and the "housewife" were constructed, concepts that have been
central to the modern Western definition of masculinity, femininity, and modern capitalism. 23The
concept of housewife has continued to allow for the provision of women's labor as a free resource until
the present day.
While these new economic arrangements were synonymous with the birth of the Enlightenment,
femaleness became associated with what Enlightenment knowledge had left behind. The persecution of
witches, who were defending female crafts and medical skills of a precapitalist era against a growing
male professionalism, reached new heights in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Jean Bodin
(1530-96), a French mercantilist and founder of the quantitative theory of money as well as the modern
concept of national sovereignty, was one of the most vocal proponents of the persecution of witches.
According to Bodin's mercantilist philosophy, the modern state must be invested with absolute
sovereignty for the development of new wealth necessary for fighting wars; to this end the state needed
more workers and thus must eliminate witches who were held responsible for abortion and other forms of
birth control. 24
Sovereignty and rationality were part of an Enlightenment epistemology committed to the discovery of
universal objective or "scientific" laws, an epistemology that also discredited superstitions often
portrayed as "old wives tales." 25 As discussed earlier, notions such as objectivity and rationality, central
to the definition of the modern natural and social sciences in the West, have typically been associated
with masculine thinking. According to Evelyn Fox Keller, Western cultural values have simultaneously
elevated what is defined as scientific and what is defined as masculine. 26 In her study of the origins of
modern science in the seventeenth century, Keller claims that modern scientific thought is associated
with masculinity. Keller bases her claim on psychological theories of gender development, which argue
that the separation of subject from object is an important stage of childhood "masculine" gender
development. As infants begin to relate to the world around them, they learn to recognize the world
outside as independent of themselves. Since an important aspect of this development of autonomy is
separation from the mother, it is a separation that is likely to be made more completely by boys than by
girls.
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Whereas the Greeks had relegated the economy largely to the world of women and slaves, in
seventeenth-century Europe the economy was elevated to the public domain of rational scientific
knowledge, a domain composed mostly of men. The economic nationalist approach has taken the liberal
concept of rational economic man, which grew out of this Enlightenment knowledge, and used it to
explain the behavior of states in the international system. Using game theoretic models, such
explanations of states' behavior draw on the instrumentally rational market behavior of individuals. Since
international economic interactions rarely result in winner-take-all situations, economic nationalists have
focused on Prisoner's Dilemma games, similar to those used by neorealists to explain the strategic
security dilemma, to explain states' economic behavior in the international system. Where international
economic cooperation is seen to exist, it is explained not in terms of international community but rather
in terms of enlightened self-interest in an environment that is essentially anarchic. 27
In her feminist critique of game theory, Birgit Brock-Utne cites recent research to support her claim that
men and women exhibit different types of behavior when playing Prisoner's Dilemma games.
Challenging a research finding that suggests that men may be more cooperative than women since, in
single-sex Prisoner's Dilemma games, men choose a cooperative strategy more often than women,
Brock-Utne claims that this is because men are more interested than women in strategic considerations of
winning the game. When given a choice, men prefer games of skill, while women prefer games of
chance. Since Prisoner's Dilemma is a game of skill, this may explain why women tend to lose interest
when playing such games and fail to figure out the best strategy to maximize gains. 28 If, as Brock-Utne
suggests, women tend to find this type of game based on instrumental rational behavior uninteresting, it
is unlikely that they would have selected this methodology for explaining the behavior of states in the
international economic system.
Using game theoretic models to explain states' behavior in the international system, economic
nationalists, like the neorealists discussed in chapter 2, often portray states as unitary actors;
concentrating at the interstate level, economic nationalists do not generally focus their attention on the
internal distribution of gains. But if, as I have argued, women have been peripheral to the institutions of
state power and are less economically rewarded than men, the validity of the unitary actor assumption
must be examined from the perspective of gender. We must question whether women are gaining equally
to men from economic nationalist prescriptions to pursue wealth and power. In all states, women tend to
be clustered at the bottom of the socioeconomic scale; in the United States in the 1980s, 78 percent of all
people living in poverty were women or children under eighteen. 29 In the United States, certain
feminists have noted a trend toward what they term the increasing feminization of poverty: in the 1970s
and 1980s, families maintained by women alone increased from 36 percent to 51.5 percent of all poor
families. 30 In societies where military spending is high, women are often the first to feel the effects of
economic hardship when social welfare programs are sacrificed for military priorities. As I have
mentioned before, for economic nationalists the military-industrial complex is an important part of the
domestic economy entitled to special protection. For poor women, however, the trade-off between
military and economic spending can pose a security threat as real as external military threats.
I have shown that the economic nationalist explanation of states' behavior in the international system,
which focuses on instrumental rationality, is biased toward a masculine representation. Moreover, the
evolution of the modern state system and the capitalist world economy changed traditional gender roles
in ways that were not always beneficial to women. Contemporary economic nationalist prescriptions for
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maximizing wealth and power can have a particularly negative impact on women since women are often
situated at the edge of the market or the bottom of the socioeconomic scale.
Marxism
Contemporary Marxist approaches to international political economy come out of the perspective of the
weak and powerless on the peripheries of the world economy. Like economic nationalism, contemporary
Marxist approaches also arose as a critique of liberalism; unlike economic nationalists, however,
Marxists deny that economic openness, even if it were adhered to by all states, could ever result in
mutually beneficial gains. Writers in the dependency and world systems schools, not all of whom are
Marxists but all of whom owe an intellectual debt to Marxism, argue that the capitalist world economy
operates, through trade and investment, in a way that distorts the economies of underdeveloped states in
the Third World and condemns them to permanent marginalization; their participation in the world
capitalist economy is seen as detrimental to their development and as exacerbating both domestic and
international inequalities between the rich and the poor. 31 Concepts of core and periphery, which exist
both in the world economy and within the domestic economies of states themselves, are used to explain
these inequalities: class alliances between capitalists in the Third World and transnational capital
contribute to the further marginalization of peripheral sectors of Third World economies. 32 Therefore,
according to these writers, both the domestic and international political and economic relations of Third
World capitalist states are embedded in the exploitative structures of a capitalist world economy.
Authentic, autonomous development, which meets the economic security needs of all people, can be
achieved only by a socialist revolution and by the very difficult task of breaking detrimental ties with the
world economy.
Feminist Critiques of Marxism
Since they speak for the interests of the least powerful in the international system, Marxist theories
would appear to be more compatible with feminist perspectives. In fact much of recent feminist theory
owes a strong intellectual debt to Marxism. Like Marxists, radical, socialist, and postmodern feminists
see knowledge as historically and socially constructed. Marxists and feminists would agree that
knowledge is embedded in human activity. Like much of feminist theory, many Marxists reject both the
notion of a universal and abstract rationality and the claims of "objectivity" upon which both the liberal
and economic nationalist approaches to international political economy depend so heavily.
For feminists, the Marxist understanding of knowledge is helpful because it supports their claim that
knowledge has been constructed in such a way that it denies a voice to women. Nevertheless, feminism is
often critical of Marxism; feminists who claim to be Marxists acknowledge that Marxist theory is in need
of considerable revision if it is to speak to the various interests of women. Feminists criticize Marxist
theories for ignoring women in their reproductive and domestic roles and for assuming that class-based
capitalist oppression is synonymous with women's oppression.
Contemporary Marxist approaches to international political economy take class as their basic unit of
analysis. In classical Marxist theory, women were subsumed under this class analysis rather than
discussed as a group with particular interests and needs. In The Origin of the Family, Private Property,
and the State, Frederick Engels tied women's oppression to male ownership of private property under
capitalism and to women's dependence on men for their subsistence. Engels and other Marxists believed
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that when women entered the labor market, they would be made economically independent and could
join with working-class men in the overthrow of capitalism, thus leading to liberation for both men and
women under socialism. 33
Socialist feminists argue that this type of class-based analysis ignores two important factors: first, that
women are oppressed in specific ways that are attributable to patriarchy rather than to capitalism; and,
second, that class analysis ignores women's role in the family. These feminists maintain that women do
not have the same opportunities as men when they enter the work force in any society, socialist or
capitalist. As discussed earlier, women worldwide earn less than men on an average, even when
performing similar tasks. The problem of child care hinders women's entry into the job market and when
they do enter the labor market women tend to be ghettoized in low-paying jobs or to face wage
discrimination. In all societies, jobs that are predominantly occupied by women are considered less
prestigious and therefore less well paid than those occupied by men. Women frequently experience
harassment and intimidation in the workplace, and taking time off to bear and raise children may threaten
job security and impede opportunities for promotion.
However, it is Marxism's tendency to ignore women in their reproductive roles that feminists criticize the
most. For classical Marxists, procreation was seen as a natural female process, fixed by human biology.
Therefore a division of labor, whereby women are primarily responsible for the rearing of children, was
also seen as relatively fixed. 34 Since it assumed that women's role as caretakers of children was
"natural," an assumption now questioned by many feminists, classical Marxism omitted women's roles in
the family from its analysis. Feminists argue that ignoring women in their reproductive and child-rearing
roles, an omission common to all approaches to political economy, leaves all the unpaid labor that
women perform in the family outside of economic analysis. 35 By ignoring women in their domestic
roles, Marxists and non-Marxists alike neglect certain issues that are peculiar to women, regardless of
their class position. When married women move into the labor force they usually continue to be
responsible for most of the housework and child rearing. 36 Besides the lack of respect for unpaid
housework and the dependence of full-time housewives on the incomes of their husbands, women,
including those in the work force, usually suffer a severe decline in income should their marriage end in
divorce. Economic dependence may force women to stay in violent and abusive marriages.
Gender ideologies, which dictate that women should be mothers and housewives, justify discriminatory
practices in the labor market and place a double work burden on women. Maria Mies suggests that the
historical process of the development of the gendered role of housewife in early modern Europe was an
important part of the evolution of the capitalist world economy. She argues that the "nonproductive"
labor of women was the foundation upon which the process of capital accumulation got started on a
global scale. Mies claims that the processes of imperialism and "housewifization" were causally
interrelated in nineteenth-century Europe: housewifization encouraged the demand for luxury items
produced in the colonies to be consumed by European women, thus moving the display of luxury from
the public to the private domain. Housewifization also produced the Victorian image of the good woman
withdrawn from war, politics, and money-making, with the consequence that women's labor became a
natural resource that was freely available outside the wage economy. Mies ties all these historical
practices to the workings of the contemporary global economy in which former colonies are still
producing consumer goods for the First World, production often undertaken by poorly paid women
whose low wages are justified as supplementary income for future mothers and housewives. 37
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If Marxist theories have paid insufficient attention to the historical evolution of women's private roles in
households, feminist writers also claim that contemporary Marxist analysis, which focuses on the
structural problems of Third World economies, does not deal adequately with the position of
marginalized women in these areas. Although they often play a crucial role in subsistence production,
women in the Third World are increasingly being defined as dependents, which further reinforces their
marginality and denies them access to the monetary economy. 38 While dependency theory claims that
the continued marginalization of those in the subsistence sector is a structural consequence of the
dualisms produced by capitalist development, it does not acknowledge the disproportionate numbers of
women among the marginalized, nor the fact that the status of women relative to men has been declining
in many parts of the Third World.
Studies based on the contemporary situation in Europe and North America suggest that women make up
a slight majority of the world's population; when women have similar nutritional standards and get
similar medical treatment to men, they tend to live longer. On a global scale, however, women do not
constitute a majority of the population. Mies argues that there has been a steady decline in numbers of
women in proportion to men in India since the beginning of the twentieth century. She attributes this to a
higher mortality rate of female babies and young girls as well as to a high maternal mortality rate. In
instances where overall mortality rates have been reduced, studies show that women receive less
adequate health treatment and have lower nutritional standards than men. 39
As reported in the New York Times of June 17, 1991, data from China's 1990 census reveal that 5 percent
of infant girls born in China are unaccounted for. In a society where boys are strongly preferred, China's
one-child-per-couple population policy may result in girls not being registered at birth or being put up for
adoption. While infanticide is considered to be rare, ultrasonic testing to determine the sex of the fetus
allows for the abortion of females, a practice that is increasing in many parts of the Third World.
Amartya Sen reveals that population studies in the Third World in general suggest that more than 100
million women are missing, a statistic that speaks of the inequality and neglect that leads to the excessive
mortality of women. Economic development is quite often accompanied by a relative worsening of the
rate of women's survival resulting from the fact that women do not share equally in the advances in
medical and social progress. Calling it one of the "more momentous and neglected problems facing the
world today," Sen asserts that, in view of the enormity of this problem, it is surprising that this issue has
received so little attention. 40 Feminists would be less surprised than Sen; claiming that the negative
effects of the world economy on women have been ignored by all schools of international political
economy, they would say that the particular oppression of women evident in such data must be explained
by gender-discriminating practices that include, but extend well beyond, the effects of capitalism.
If, as many feminists claim, women's oppression is due to patriarchy as well as capitalism, could the
position of women be expected to improve under socialism, as Marxists believe? Socialist feminists
agree that the condition of women in socialist states usually improves in the areas of social policies,
welfare, and legal rights. 41 The availability of maternity rights, day care, and other institutional reforms
may further improve the position of working women in socialist states. However, studies of women in
the Soviet Union in the 1980s found that while women constituted 51 percent of the work force, they
were disproportionately concentrated in unskilled jobs and continued to carry most of the domestic
workload. 42 Although traditional Marxism saw women's entry into the labor force as a liberation,
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women in the former Soviet Union have seen it as an additional burden on top of demanding household
duties in a state that chose to sacrifice consumer interests to state-centric heavy industrialization. 43
Since interference in the family as an institution is as much resisted in socialist states as it is in capitalist
states, problems of powerlessness and violence, which women encounter in families, remain. Moreover,
writers on women in socialist states generally conclude that, even if women's conditions in the work
force are improved, women are as poorly represented in positions of state power and decision making as
they are in capitalist states. These feminists argue that, although women may suffer from particular forms
of repression under capitalism, the liberation of women through class struggle cannot be assumed. It will
only come about when women are equal to men in both the public and the private spheres, a condition
that would not necessarily obtain in a postcapitalist world.
Feminist Perspectives on International Political Economy
I have shown that the individual, the state, and class, which are the basic units of analysis for the liberal,
economic nationalist, and Marxist approaches to international political economy, respectively, are biased
toward masculine representations. Hence the prescriptions that each of these models offers for
maximizing economic welfare and security may work to the advantage of men more than women. I shall
now discuss how we might go about constructing feminist perspectives upon which to build less
gender-biased representations of international political economy, perspectives that would include the
various economic security needs of women.
The liberal and economic nationalist perspectives both rely on an instrumental, depersonalized definition
of rationality that equates the rationality of individuals and states with a type of behavior that maximizes
self-interest. These approaches assume that rational action can be defined objectively, regardless of time
and place. Since most nonliberal feminists assume that the self is in part constructed out of one's place in
a particular society, they would take issue with this definition of rationality: agreeing with Marxists, they
would argue that individuals and states are socially constituted and that what counts as rational action is
embodied within a particular society. Since rationality is associated with profit maximization in capitalist
societies, the accepted definition of rationality has been constructed out of activities related to the public
sphere of the market and thus distinguished from the private sphere of the household. Feminists argue
that, since it is men who have primarily occupied this public sphere, rationality as we understand it is tied
to a masculine type of reasoning that is abstract and conceptual. Many women, whose lived experiences
have been more closely bound to the private sphere of care giving and child rearing, would define
rationality as contextual and personal rather than as abstract. In their care-giving roles women are
engaged in activities associated with serving others, activities that are rational from the perspective of
reproduction rather than production.
A feminist redefinition of rationality might therefore include an ethic of care and responsibility. Such a
definition would be compatible with behavior more typical of many women's lived experiences and
would allow us to assume rational behavior that is embedded in social activities not necessarily tied to
profit maximization. It could be extended beyond the household to include responsibility for the earth
and its resources, a concern that is quite rational from the perspective of the survival and security of
future generations.
Liberal, economic nationalist, and Marxist perspectives have all tended to focus their analysis at the
systems level, whether it be the international system of states or the world capitalist economy. Feminist
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perspectives on political economy should be constructed from the bottom up, from the standpoint of
those at the periphery of the world economy or the international system. Feminist perspectives should
take the individual as the basic unit of analysis, but an individual defined differently from rational
economic man. Since feminists claim that the liberal assumption of individual autonomy and
self-sufficiency is unrealistic, feminist perspectives would assume a connected, interdependent individual
whose behavior includes activities related to reproduction as well as production. In order to capture these
productive and reproductive activities, the artificial boundaries between the world of instrumentally
rational economic man in the public sphere of production and the socially rational activities that women
perform outside the economy as mothers, care givers, and producers of basic needs must be broken
down. Destroying these barriers would help to reduce the differential value attached to the "rational" or
"efficient" world of production and the private world of reproduction. Were childbearing and child
rearing seen as more valued activities, also rational from the perspective of reproduction, it could help to
reduce the excessive focus on the efficiency of an ever-expanding production of commodities, a focus
whose utility in a world of shrinking resources, vast inequalities, and increasing environmental damage is
becoming questionable. A perspective that takes this redefined individual as its basic unit of analysis
could help to create an alternative model of political economy that respects human relationships as well
as their relation to nature. 44
This feminist redefinition of rationality allows us to take as a starting point the assumption that the
economic behavior of individuals is embedded in relationships that extend beyond the market. Maria
Mies argues that the production of life should be defined as work rather than as unconscious natural
activity. Labor must include life-producing work and subsistence production rather than being restricted
to surplus-producing labor. Instead of accepting the sexual division of labor as natural, feminist
perspectives should place the production of life as the main goal of human activity and work toward
breaking down the artificial division of labor created along gender lines that perpetuates the devaluation
of women's work. 45
To make women's work valued by society, the barriers between public and private must be broken down.
Subsistence labor, volunteer work, household work, and reproduction are among the economic activities
performed primarily by women that are not counted as economically productive. Marilyn Waring claims
that women have been rendered invisible in national accounting data. Since these kinds of women's work
are not included in the annual reports of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, or the
development agencies, projects are not planned with women in mind. While economists have claimed
that nonmonetary labor is too hard to count, Waring suggests some ways, such as time-use data, which
would make this possible. 46
If a substantial portion of women's productive and reproductive activities are taking place on the
peripheries of the world economy in households or in the subsistence sector of Third World economies,
feminist perspectives must be concerned with achieving economic justice in these particular contexts.
While agreeing that women's domestic labor should be recognized as work, feminists caution that
economic security for women in households cannot be guaranteed in the family as it is presently
constituted. Although the family has been designated as the private sphere of women, the concept of
male head of household has ensured that male power has traditionally been exercised in the private as
well as the public realm. Susan Okin argues that families are not just to women or children as long as
women continue to bear a disproportionate share of child rearing, have lower expected incomes than
men, and are left with primary responsibility for supporting and caring for children if families break up.
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Okin claims that only when paid and unpaid work associated with both productive and reproductive labor
is shared equally by men and women can the family be a just institution and one that can provide the
basis for a just society. 47
As I have already discussed, Third World development strategies have tended to ignore the subsistence
sector where much of women's labor is being performed, with the result that modernization has had a
differential impact on men and women and has in certain instances actually reduced the position of
women. Due to the virtual absence of women from local and national power structures, development
programs have tended to support projects in areas of production that are dominated by men. To achieve
economic justice for rural women in the Third World, development must target projects that benefit
women, particularly those in the subsistence sector. Improvements in agriculture should focus on
consumption as well as production; in many parts of Africa, gathering water and fuel, under conditions of
increasing scarcity and environmental degradation, are taking up larger portions of women's time and
energy.
Since women are so centrally involved in the satisfaction of basic needs in households and in the
subsistence economy, feminist approaches to international political economy must be supportive of a
basic needs approach where basic needs are defined inclusively, in terms of both material needs and the
need for political participation. I have argued that export-oriented development strategies have tended to
contribute to domestic inequality and, in times of recession and increasing international indebtedness,
have had a particularly detrimental impact on women; a strategy that seeks to satisfy basic needs within
the domestic economy may thus be the best type of strategy to improve the welfare of women. Local
satisfaction of basic needs requires more attention to subsistence or domestic food production rather than
to growing crops for export markets. A more self-reliant economy would also be less vulnerable to the
decisions of foreign investors, whose employment policies can be particularly exploitative of women. 48
Basic needs strategies are compatible with values of nurturance and caring; such strategies are
dependency-reducing and can empower women to take charge of their own lives and create conditions
that increase their own security.
As Anne Marie Goetz claims, women have been completely absent from the process of setting national
development priorities. I argued previously that women must be seen as agents in the provision of their
own physical security; creating conditions under which women become agents in the provision of their
own economic security is also imperative. Just as women are seen as victims in need of protection in the
protector/protected relationship, when women become visible in the world economy, they tend to do so
as welfare problems or as individuals marginalized from mainstream development projects. Separating
women from men, often as an undifferentiated category, ignores the importance of relations between men
and women and the detrimental effects of hierarchical gender relationships on women's economic
security. It also ignores the ways in which women's varying identities and development interests as
farmers, factory workers, merchants, and householders bear on gender relations in different contexts. 49
To overcome the problems of essentialization as well as the perception of victimization, women must be
represented at all levels of economic planning, and their knowledge must be seen as valuable rather than
unscientific.
At a time when existing political and economic institutions seem increasingly incapable of solving many
global problems, feminist perspectives, by going beyond an investigation of market relations, state
behavior, and capitalism, could help us to understand how the global economy affects those on the
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fringes of the market, the state, or in households as we attempt to build a more secure world where
inequalities based on gender and other forms of discrimination are eliminated. Looking at the world
economy from the perspective of those on its fringes can help us think about constructing a model
concerned with the production of life rather than the production of things and wealth. Maria Mies argues
that the different conception of labor upon which such a model depends could help us adapt our life-style
at a time when we are becoming increasingly conscious of the finiteness of the earth and its resources. 50
I shall now turn to a consideration of conditions necessary for the security of our natural environment
and to an examination of how feminist perspectives could also help us to think about the achievement of
ecological security.
*: An earlier version of this chapter appeared in Murphy and Tooze, eds., The New International
Political Economy. Back.
**: Galbraith epigraph quoted in Waring, If Women Counted, p. 277; Jain epigraph quoted in Pietil;aua
and Vickers, Making Women Matter, p. 35; Perez de Cuellar, secretary general of the United Nations,
quoted in the New York Times, June 16, 1991, p. A7. Back.
Note 1: Gilpin, The Political Economy of International Relations, ch. 2. Gilpin uses the term nationalism
rather than economic nationalism. I shall use economic nationalism to distinguish this approach from the
international relations literature on nation building. Back.
Note 2: Marianne A. Ferber and Michelle L. Teiman, "The Oldest, the Most Established, the Most
Quantitative of the Social Sciences-- and the Most Dominated by Men: The Impact of Feminism on
Economics," ch. 9 in Spender, ed., Men's Studies Modified. The authors note that in the U.S. in 1980 only
8 percent of Ph.D.'s in economics were awarded to women and that women made up only 5 percent of
full-time economics faculties in institutions of higher learning. Back.
Note 3: Just as I used the term political man in chapter 2, I shall use the term economic man or rational
economic man in this chapter. Since liberal economics has constructed rational economic man out of
activities historically associated with men in the public sphere of production, I shall retain this Back.
Note 4: Hartsock, Money, Sex, and Power, p. 47. Back.
Note 5: Harding, The Science Question in Feminism, pp. 167-179. Back.
Note 6: Hartsock, Money, Sex, and Power, p. 41. Back.
Note 7: Harding, The Science Question in Feminism, p. 171. Back.
Note 8: Jaggar, Feminist Politics and Human Nature, pp. 40-48. Back.
Note 9: Gill and Law, The Global Political Economy, p. 364. Back.
Note 10: Jaggar, Feminist Politics and Human Nature, p. 138. Back.
Note 11: Connell, Gender and Power, p. 7. Some results from the study quoted in Connell were as
follows: for West Germany, women's wages as a percentage of men's were 73 percent; for Japan, 43
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percent; for Egypt, 63 percent; for El Salvador, 81 percent; and for Poland, 67 percent. In the United
States in 1987 women who worked full time made 71 percent of what men earned (Okin, Justice,
Gender, and the Family, p. 144). Back.
Note 12: For a review of this literature see Jaquette, "Women and Modernization Theory." The
marginalization of this literature from mainstream development theory tends to reinforce women's
isolation and their characterization as victims rather than agents. Back.
Note 13: Boserup, Women's Role in Economic Development, ch. 3. Back.
Note 14: Sen and Grown, Development, Crises, and Alternative Visions, p. 34. The DAWN group,
founded by Devaki Jain, comprises twenty-two Third World women researchers and activists who
decided to prepare an independent report of world development for the Nairobi Conference from a Third
World women's perspective. This report is the result. Back.
Note 15: Dankelman and Davidson, Women and Environment in the Third World, ch. 2. Back.
Note 16: A 1991 Report of the U.N. International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) reported
that the number of rural women living in poverty in Third World countries increased 50 percent over the
last two decades and that women far outnumber men in such straits. This increase has occurred despite
economic gains made by many of these countries. The report claims that, while women form the
backbone of agricultural labor in many areas, their contributions remain invisible. Reported in the Boston
Globe, July 29, 1991, p. 2. Back.
Note 17: Pasuk Phongpaichit, "Two Roads to the Factory: Industrialization Strategies and Women's
Employment in South-East Asia," in Agarwal, ed., Structures of Patriarchy, pps. 151-163. Back.
Note 18: Enloe, Bananas, Beaches, and Bases, ch. 7. Back.
Note 19: For a detailed analysis of the effects of the International Monetary Fund's policies of structural
adjustment on women see Vickers, Women and the World Economic Crisis, ch. 2. Back.
Note 20: See, for example, Gilpin, The Political Economy of International Relations, and Stephen
Krasner, "American Policy and Global Economic Stability," ch. 2 in Avery and Rapkin, eds., America in
a Changing World Political Economy. Back.
Note 21: Gill and Law, The Global Political Economy, p. 367. Back.
Note 22: Mitchell, "Women and Equality," ch. 1 in Phillips, ed., Feminism and Equality, p. 31. Back.
Note 23: Connell, Gender and Power, p. 153. Back.
Note 24: Mies, Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale, p. 83. Back.
Note 25: Leonore Davidoff, "Adam Spoke First and Named the Orders of the World: Masculine and
Feminine Domains in History and Sociology," in Corr and Jamieson, eds., The Politics of Everyday Life,
p. 234. Back.
Note 26: Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science, chs. 3 and 4. Back.
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Note 27: See for example Axelrod, The Evolution of Cooperation, and Keohane, After Hegemony, pp.
67-84. A Prisoner's Dilemma game is derived from a story about two imprisoned suspects allowed to
negotiate their pleas only with a powerful district attorney. Particular configurations of utility payoffs
derive from this story. Specifically, it is assumed that for each player T (temptation payoff associated
with his or her defection and the other's cooperation) > R (the reward individually received for joint
cooperation) ;mt P (the individual penalty of both players' defection) > S (the "sucker"payoff associated
with his or her cooperation and the other's defection). Sometimes the simplifying constraint that 2R >
S+T is also assumed. Back.
Note 28: Brock-Utne, "Gender and Cooperation in the Laboratory." BrockUtne cites other recent
research that suggests that women may be more influenced by the interpersonal situation, such as getting
along with other players, than by strategy considerations associated with winning the game. This is
consistent with Deborah Tannen's claim that women in conversation prioritize relationships. See Tannen,
You Just Don't Understand. Back.
Note 29: Seager and Olson, Women in the World, p. 28. Back.
Note 30: Pierce, "The Feminization of Poverty," p. 1. Back.
Note 31: Gill and Law, The Global Political Economy, pp. 54-69. Back.
Note 32: This is one of the central claims of Galtung's analysis in "A Structural Theory of Imperialism."
Back.
Note 33: Jaggar, Feminist Politics and Human Nature, pp. 63-69. Back.
Note 34: Ibid., p. 75. Back.
Note 35: For an extended analysis of this issue, see Waring, If Women Counted. Back.
Note 36: Okin, Justice, Gender, and the Family, p. 153. Back.
Note 37: Mies, Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale, pp. 100-110. Back.
Note 38: Ibid., p. 115. Back.
Note 39: Ibid., p. 31. Back.
Note 40: Sen, "More Than 100 Million Women Are Missing," p. 66. Back.
Note 41: Molyneux, "Mobilization Without Emancipation?" Back.
Note 42: Moore, Feminism and Anthropology, pp. 141-142. Back.
Note 43: Hansson and Liden, Moscow Women. These interviews suggest that these women preferred the
traditional role of housewife to the double burden of working outside the home as well as taking care of a
family. Back.
Note 44: Kaldor, "The Global Political Economy," p. 454. Back.
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Note 45: Mies, Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale, ch. 2. Back.
Note 46: Waring, If Women Counted, ch. 11. Back.
Note 47: Okin, Gender and Justice, pp. 171ff. Back.
Note 48: For an extended analysis of such a self-reliant development strategy see Tickner, Self-Reliance
Versus Power Politics. Back.
Note 49: Goetz, "Feminism and the Limits of the Claim to Know," pp. 482-483. Back.
Note 50: Mies, Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale, pp. 211ff. Back.
Gender in International Relations
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Gender in International Relations: Feminist Perspectives on Achieving Global Security, by J. Ann Tickner
4. Man over Nature: Gendered Perspectives on
Ecological Security
Taking care of one planet is nothing special, nothing sacred, nothing holy. It's
something like taking care of our own house. Dalai Lama
Americans did not fight and win the wars of the 20th century to make the world safe
for green vegetables.
Richard Darman *
Until very recently ecological concerns have not been at the center of the agenda of international
relations theory or practice. A global issue that defies national boundaries and calls for collective action,
caring for the environment does not fit well with the power-seeking, instrumental behavior of states that I
have described in previous chapters. Barry Commoner's definition of ecology as the "science of planetary
housekeeping"1 is not the business of Realpolitik; such metaphors evoke images of the devalued private
domain of women rather than the "important" public world of diplomacy and national security.
Ecological bumper stickers with such messages as "Love Your Mother" are hardly designed to appeal to
those engaged in the "serious" business of state-craft and war. Therefore the inattention to environmental
problems and the silencing of women in international relations may be more than coincidental.
The term ecology, which means the study of life forms "at home," is based on the Greek root for house;
its modern meaning is the interrelationships between living organisms and their environment.2 These
definitions evoke images of a domestic space traditionally populated by women, children, and servants.
Ecology's emphasis on holism and reproduction and metaphors such as global housekeeping connect it to
women's rather than men's life experiences.
Yet ecology has also been viewed with some ambivalence by feminists. Many of them are suspicious of
ecology and ecofeminism because they regard the age-old connection between women and nature, which
both have espoused, as a basis of women's oppression. Socialist feminists, particularly, have criticized
what they see as ecofeminists' tendency to essentialize women and naturalize their reproductive and
domestic roles. This tendency perpetuates the dualistic hierarchies described in chapter 1 that most
feminists believe must be eliminated if gender equality is to be achieved.3 Yet some recent ecofeminist
scholarship is rejecting this essentialist connection between women and nature, as well as making
important and interesting alliances with the ecological tradition. Believing that the oppression of women
and the domination of nature are both the result of patriarchy, these ecofeminists claim that the
connection must be made explicit if structures of domination in both our natural and human
environments are to be overcome. For this reason, these feminist ecological perspectives can offer us
important new insights into the way we think about our natural environment, insights that could be useful
for thinking about the achievement of global ecological security.
Since its birth in seventeenth-century Europe, the modern state system has had an uneasy relationship
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with its natural environment; natural resources and geographical spaces have been viewed as resources
for increasing state power and wealth. Feminist writers such as Carolyn Merchant and Evelyn Fox Keller
describe a fundamental change in the Western scientific community's attitude toward the natural
environment that also began in seventeenth-century Europe. Before this scientific revolution, nature had
been seen as a living system of which humans formed an integral part; in the seventeenth century, human
beings became preeminent, and nature began to be viewed as a machine to be exploited for human
benefit. This mechanistic view of nature has been highly compatible with the needs of a competitive
international system, a world divided into antagonistic political units, each seeking to enhance its power
by securing and increasing access to natural resources, through geographical expansion when necessary.
Since this is a worldview that has had important, although often implicit, implications for the evolution
of the theory and practice of international relations, I shall begin this chapter with a feminist account of
the way nature has been viewed by Western Enlightenment science. This changed perception of nature,
from living organism to inert machine, was accompanied by shifting attitudes toward women whose lives
were gradually being moved into domestic spaces where they were to become increasingly marginalized
from the productive system. These changes can be linked to the competitive security-seeking behavior of
an expansionary state system, whose colonizing activities have caused ecological changes in larger
geopolitical spaces. This power-seeking behavior poses dangers for the security of the natural
environment and its inhabitants, women and men alike.
Although raising environmental issues only marginally, scholars in conventional international relations
approaches have assumed that natural resources are an important element of state power and thus vital
for national security. Recently, however, some new thinking in international relations has begun to
question these assumptions; the pressure on what is now seen as a finite resource base, as well as the
inability of states to deal with environmental degradation, is threatening the security of all, whether rich
or poor. These new thinkers also draw attention to international inequalities associated with
environmental degradation and attempt to revisualize geopolitical spaces and boundaries from an
ecological perspective.
Although much of this new thinking questions the optimistic assumptions of Enlightenment science
about nature's rejuvenative ability to provide unlimited resources for human progress, it remains firmly
rooted in an Enlightenment view of nature as machine. Only ecologists and ecofeminists have taken an
even more radical step, one that challenges modern science's mechanistic view of nature. I shall conclude
this chapter by examining the views of ecologists and ecofeminists who believe that solutions to our
contemporary dilemmas demand a revolution, not only in our political thinking but also in the way we
view nature-- in other words, a revolution as fundamental as the one that took place in
seventeenth-century Europe.
The Modern State and Its Natural Environment
Hans Morgenthau's text Politics Among Nations, discussed in more detail in chapter 2, pays scant
attention to the natural environment, an omission common to many traditional texts in international
relations. Morgenthau discusses natural resources only in terms of their role as essential elements of state
power.4 He emphasizes the importance of natural resource self-sufficiency as crucial for national power,
particularly in wartime. He describes dramatic historical shifts, such as the disappearance of the Near
East and North Africa as centers of power, caused by a notable decline in agricultural productivity.
Consistent with the Western geopolitical tradition of the early twentieth century, Morgenthau claims that
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the United States owes its status as a great power in part to its advantageous geographical position in the
international system. As a large land mass protected by bodies of water on both sides, the United States
has been in a strategically advantageous position throughout the latter half of the twentieth century,
particularly for purposes of making credible nuclear threats.
Morgenthau's treatment of natural resources and geopolitics typifies the way the natural environment has
been viewed in the dominant traditions of Western international relations "theory. In a hierarchical
international system, access to natural resources and a favorable geographical position have been key
elements for the achievement of state power; for those with the capabilities to do so, these assets should
be protected by military means and increased through overseas expansion or conquest if necessary.5
"State-of-nature myths, used by realist theoreticians to explain and prescribe for states' behavior in the
international system, have reinforced this dominating and exploitative attitude toward nature. Metaphors
that depict a wild natural environment devoid of controlling political institutions, "the war of everyman
against everyman," demand the erection of "strong boundaries to protect tamed domestic spaces against
uncontrollable outside forces. States with the capacity to do so may move beyond these boundaries to
reap the bounties of nature through projects of expansion and subjugation.
Nature, Women, and the State in Early Modern Europe
These views of the natural environment as spaces to be tamed, mastered, and used for profit and
advantage are also reflected in the shift toward a mechanistic view of nature that appeared in
seventeenth-century Europe at the time the modern state system was born. In her book The Death of
Nature, Carolyn Merchant documents this changing attitude toward nature generated by the scientific
revolution. Although humans' "dominion over nature" has been traced back to Greek and Christian
roots,6 Merchant claims that in medieval Europe nature was viewed as an organism or living system in
which human beings and their natural environments were highly interdependent. Nature was generally
depicted as female, the earth as a nurturing mother who provided for the needs of humankind. Nature
could be dangerous, however; its wild and uncontrollable behavior could produce chaos.7 In the
seventeenth century nature was gradually conceptually transformed from a living organism into a lifeless
inert machine, thereby permitting its exploitation and use for purposes of human progress. This evolving
view of nature as machine was vital for the goals of the emerging new science, which sought to tame
nature through the discovery of predictable regularities within a rationally determined system of laws.
According to Merchant, a central concern of the scientific revolution was to use these mathematical laws
in order to intervene in an increasingly secularized world.8
Changing attitudes toward animals provide further evidence of the taming and depersonalization of
nature in early modern Europe. In her book The Animal Estate, Harriet Ritvo describes the legal system
of medieval England, which had implicitly invested animals with human rights and responsibilities.
Animals were held accountable for their crimes: dogs, cats, and cocks were permitted, as members of
households, to testify in court-- or at least their presence there was considered to strengthen the aggrieved
householder's complaint.9 By the nineteenth century, however, animals could no longer be sentenced to
die for their crimes. Ritvo claims that this seemingly humanitarian policy had a reverse side; animals
were no longer perceived as having any independent status. This changing relationship between animals
and people ensured the appropriation of power by people as animals became objects of human
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manipulation. As animals' position in the human world changed so did the way in which they were
studied. According to Ritvo, modern scientific methods of classification of animals and plants, which
employ anthropocentric binary distinctions such as wild/tame, useful/useless, edible/inedible, also
attempt to impose order on a chaotic natural environment. Just as many feminists see gender
dichotomizations as instruments of domination, Ritvo views the classification of natural objects as the
human attempt to gain intellectual mastery and domination of the natural world.10
Although Ritvo's study is not specifically a feminist text, she makes reference to language employed by
naturalists and animal breeders that sets both women and animals below human males in the natural
hierarchy.11 The use of sexual metaphor, which feminists believe had the effect of establishing a
male-dominated hierarchy, was also employed in the language of the scientific revolution. The taming of
nature was usually described in gendered terms that reflected the social order. Feminist scholars have
drawn attention to the sexual metaphors employed by Francis Bacon and other Enlightenment scientists.
Central to Bacon's scientific investigations was a natural world, frequently described as a woman, that
required taming, shaping, and subduing by the scientific mind: "I am come in very truth leading you to
nature with all her children to bind her to your service and make her your slave."12 Social ecologist
William Leiss agrees that Bacon's scientific project was centrally concerned with mastery over nature.
But while Leiss notes the sexually aggressive overtones in Bacon's language, he is less concerned with
the implications of Bacon's sexual metaphors than with a scientific tradition that has resulted in the
domination of certain men over other human beings. This system of domination has spread outward from
Europe to the rest of the world through the appropriation of nature's resources.13
Feminist scholars such as Carolyn Merchant, Sandra Harding, and Evelyn Fox Keller, who have written
about the origins of modern science, would agree with Leiss's argument that domination of nature was a
central goal of modern science. Using a gendered perspective, however, they take his argument further:
suggesting that the sexual imagery in seventeenth-century science was intrinsic to its discourse, they
claim that the domination of certain men over other human beings, other cultures, and nature cannot be
fully understood unless this gendered language is taken seriously.
In her discussion of metaphors in science, Sandra Harding asks why certain metaphors, such as the rape
of nature, have been dismissed by historians and philosophers as irrelevant to the real meaning of
scientific concepts while others, such as the metaphor of nature as a machine, have been regarded as
fruitful components of scientific explanation.14 Harding and Keller claim that these gendered metaphors
are crucial for understanding Western science as a masculine enterprise. The separation of mind from
nature and the investigator from his or her subject of investigation have been important goals for modern
science's quest for objectivity. But as reason was separated from feeling and objectivity from
subjectivity, science came to be defined in opposition to everything female. This kind of knowledge is
consistent with a project that has involved the mastery, control, and domination of nature.15 These
feminists therefore believe that such seventeenth-century gendered metaphors were fundamental to
developing attitudes toward nature and women, as well as the racist attitudes toward non-Western
peoples that I described; these attitudes have been consistent with the practices of an expansive and
dominating international system.
As seventeenth-century science associated nature and the body with women, so the mind, or rational
thought, came to be associated with men. In the West, culture has generally been linked historically and
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symbolically with elite men whose writings, music, and art are enshrined as the canons of Western
civilization. According to Merchant, this nature/culture dichotomy was used as a justification for
devaluing women and keeping them in subordinate positions in early modern Europe. As documented by
Merchant, Keller, and other feminist scholars, the Enlightenment was not a progressive time for women;
as is often the case in eras that have traditionally been described as progressive, the position of women in
public life suffered a setback in the seventeenth century. Women's association with a disorderly nature
was personified by an increase in the persecution of witches, who were linked to the superstition and
chaos that modern science was attempting to control and tame through its investigations. Both Merchant
and Leiss note the legal metaphors in Bacon's language, metaphors that Merchant explicitly links to
seventeenth-century witch trials.16 Simultaneously, the needs of early industrial capitalism stimulated a
growing division of labor between home and workplace that began the process of severely curtailing the
economic, political, and social options available to women.17
This transition to a capitalist market economy required a greater exploitation of natural resources than
did the subsistence economy of feudal Europe. Merchant outlines changes Bin seventeenth-century
English agriculture, which began to encroach on woods and fen lands in the pursuit of the higher yields
required for production for the market. Seventeenth-century scientists justified their goals of "mastering"
and "managing" the earth in the name of human progress and increasing material wealth. The demands of
a market economy, and the increases in productivity that it generated, required the use of nonrenewable
energy resources such as timber and coal. Rendering nature as a dead, inert object was essential for
eliminating fears that the mining of metals and fuels crucial for the coming industrial revolution was a
violation of nature's inner resources.
The Domination of Nature Globalized
A nascent market economy and its need for an ever-expanding resource base, together with a new vision
of scientific progress, were important motivating forces as the early modern state system began to expand
beyond its European boundaries. Europeans started venturing overseas in search of additional wealth and
natural resources. Merchant describes an ecological crisis-- caused by Europe's shipbuilding industry, an
industry that was one of the most critical for subsequent commercial expansion and national supremacy--
that occurred as early as the sixteenth century. Shipbuilding, which depended on mature oaks for masts
and hulls, created a severe wood shortage in many parts of Europe, forcing the turn to mining coal as an
alternate source of fuel.18 As Europeans began to sail beyond their shores, the exploitation of natural
resources in the name of human progress took on wider dimensions, beginning a process that has
culminated in the twentieth century's highly interdependent global resource base with its strong potential
for increasing international competition and conflict over scarce resources. As ecological crises have
begun to take on global dimensions, humanity's vision of conquering nature has even extended beyond
the earth into space. Schemes for mining the moon and using the material to create a "Pittsburgh in
space" are being envisaged.19
In an international system consisting of autonomous sovereign political units, the notion of the world as a
single resource base has led inevitably to political competition and conflict. European expansion and
imperialism extended the seventeenth century's instrumental view of nature beyond the boundaries of
Europe as scientific progress became in itself a justification for imperialist projects. The Enlightenment
belief that the transformation of the environment was a measure of human progress was used as a
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justification for colonialism, because native populations were not deemed capable of effecting this
transformation for themselves.20 Thus the lower position assigned to women and nature in early modern
Europe was extended to members of other cultures and races.
Harriet Ritvo argues that the growing dichotomy between domestic and wild animals in modern Europe
was frequently compared to the dichotomy between civilized and savage human societies; she cites a
report, to which Charles Darwin refers in his writings, of two Scottish collies who visited Siberia and
"soon took the same superior standing" with regard to the native dogs "as the European claims for
himself in relation to the savage."21 The Regents Park Zoo, opened in London in 1828, was a celebration
of England's imperial enterprise; wild animals from all over the world were displayed as evidence of
England's ability to subdue exotic territories and convert their wild products into useful purposes. Ritvo
cites a popular nineteenth-century zoology text that compares the ferocity of wild animals to the
barbarity of native populations: when describing Africa, its author claims that "in all countries where
men are most barbarous, the animals are most cruel and fierce."22
Carolyn Merchant asserts that by 1700 "nature, women, blacks and wage laborers were set on a path
toward a new status as 'natural' and human resources for the modern world system."23 "Empty" or
"virgin" lands became sites for European conquest and settlement; according to Vandana Shiva,
wastelands, a word loaded with the biases of colonial rule, were seen as spaces to be cultivated for the
generation of revenue and resources for the "mother" country.24 In reality, these spaces were not empty
at all but occupied by people with very different relationships with their natural environment. The
expansion of the European state system meant that the scientific revolution and its mechanistic attitude
toward nature began to take on global dimensions with far-reaching implications for non-Western
ecological traditions, most of which have been lost