Wann Außenpolitik wirklich feministisch wird

Fussnoten

1

Ann (1992): Gender in International Relations. Feminist Perspec- tives on Achieving Global Security. New York: Columbia University Press: "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?", eigene Übersetzung.

2

Galtung, Johan (1969): Violence, Peace, and Peace Research. In: Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 6, No. 3, S. 168, eigene Übersetzung.

3

Ebd. S. 171f.

4

Enloe, Cynthia (o.J.): "The metaphor I prefer is a really complicated crowded dance floor. Sometimes some people are doing hip hop while other people are doing waltzes on the same dance floor. (…) I think of the crowded dance floor with competing bands that are playing different music. Then we can picture all the people in the gallery who aren’t allowed to dance, who are supposed to be grateful that they’re even allowed in to watch the dancers. And then there are all people who cleaned the ballroom before and after the dance but who are left outside in the cold or in the sweltering heat." In: "A Conversation with Prof. Dr. Cynthia Enloe: Feminist Foreign Policy in the Post-COVID 19 World" by Zuhal Yeşilyurt Gündüz. Zugriff am 03.03.2024 unter: https:// welttrends.de/res/uploads/Paper-A-Conversation-with-Cynthia-Enloe.pdf, eigene Übersetzung.

5

https://welttrends.de/res/uploads/Paper-A-Conversation-with-Cynthia-Enloe.pdf

6

https://ip-quarterly.com/en/feminist-foreign-policy-germany-not-enough

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