Conflict Prevention & Resolution
Lasting peace requires comprehensive conflict prevention, which ensures all actors have the capacity to participate in and access formal processes that address root drivers and causes of conflict and provide cooperation across political and/or other sectarian boundaries. The Security Council has, has discussed conflict prevention and resolution, including mediation, calling for gender experts in mediation teams in Security Council Resolution 2122 (2013) and issues of sexual and gender-based violence in mediation efforts in Security Council Resolution 2106 (2013). Security Council Resolution 2242 (2015) further reaffirmed that women and girls’ empowerment and gender equality are critical to conflict prevention.
The NGO Working Group works advocates for gender-sensitive approaches to both short and long-term conflict prevention efforts with a particular emphasis on addressing the root causes of conflict and systematic and structural drivers of gender inequality, gender discrimination and gender violence. Effective conflict prevention demands recognition of gendered dynamics and impacts of armed conflict, with policy analysis and monitoring that clearly identifies the masculine and feminine social roles that contribute to violence and subordination. In mainstreaming gender across conflict prevention, the Security Council is requested to support an increase in women’s participation in all efforts to prevent and resolve conflict; including by supporting women’s civil society organizations’ participation in the planning, design and implementation of preventative policies and programs for violence.
Conflict Prevention & Resolution
Lasting peace requires comprehensive conflict prevention, which ensures all actors have the capacity to participate in and access formal processes that address root drivers and causes of conflict and provide cooperation across political and/or other sectarian boundaries. The Security Council has discussed conflict prevention and resolution, including mediation- calling for gender experts in mediation teams in Security Council Resolution 2122 (2013), and issues of sexual and gender-based violence in mediation efforts in Security Council Resolution 2106 (2013). Security Council Resolution 2242 (2015) further reaffirmed that women and girls’ empowerment and gender equality are critical to conflict prevention.
The NGO Working Group works advocates for gender-sensitive approaches to both short and long-term conflict prevention efforts, with a particular emphasis on addressing the root causes of conflict and the systematic and structural drivers of gender inequality, gender discrimination and gender violence. Effective conflict prevention demands recognition of gendered dynamics and impacts of armed conflict, with policy analysis and monitoring that clearly identifies the masculine and feminine social roles contributing to violence and subordination. In mainstreaming gender across conflict prevention, the Security Council is requested to support an increase in women’s participation in all efforts to prevent and resolve conflict; including by supporting women’s civil society organizations’ participation in the planning, design and implementation of preventative policies and programs for violence.
Current and Past Recommendations to the UN Security Council (Monthly Action Points)
As recently reaffirmed in SCR 2242 (2015), women and girls’ empowerment and gender equality are critical to conflict prevention. In the discussion on conflict prevention in Africa, Member States should commit to adopting holistic approaches that address the root causes of conflict, including systemic and structural discrimination and inequalities, which are often at the heart of grievances driving instability. Member States should further outline steps to ensure women participate in the design of all conflict prevention measures, including early warning mechanisms and preventative diplomacy initiatives. Women’s civil society organizations should have an important role in all conflict prevention efforts at local levels, and Member States should recognize the need to support grassroots efforts with increased funding and political support.