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Articles

Pre-deployment ‘gender’ training and the lack thereof for Australian peacekeepers

 

ABSTRACT

In the area of peacekeeping training, Australia has a reputation of promoting ‘best practice’ internationally. Training for Australian police peacekeepers has been described by the United Nations as ‘one-of-a-kind’ and ‘a world-class model of best practice’. This article provides a case study of how gender training is conducted, and how ‘gender’ is understood from a critical feminist perspective. This article focuses only on the pre-deployment training stage and is informed by confidential interviews with staff from the Australian Federal Police and the Australian Defence Force, as well as observing training in 2013–14. The findings suggest that the training is inadequate because it is not carried out for all peacekeeping personnel, despite international and national requirements to do so. In addition, the findings suggest that ‘gender’ is understood in a very limited way that does not problematise power relations between the sexes and is only covered as a way of understanding the peacekeeping context, and not in relation to the attitudes and behaviours of peacekeepers themselves. This raises the question of whether and how other troop-contributing countries conduct the training and to what standard, given the documented problems of Australia's supposedly ‘best-practice’ training.

Notes on Contributor

Lisa Carson is a PhD candidate in the School of Social & Political Sciences at The University of Melbourne. Her current research is on Gender Training for peacekeepers in the context of UNSCR 1325 and is based on extensive fieldwork and confidential interviewing with staff who work in the area. Lisa has a Masters of International Relations from The University of Melbourne, First Class Honours from RMIT and a Bachelor of Arts from The University of Melbourne.

Notes

1. It is important to note that the UN has implemented a policy of zero tolerance towards sexual exploitation and abuse, and has developed separate ‘sexual exploitation and abuse training’ to help combat abuse, but this is beyond the scope of this article.

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