%0 PDF %T Environmental Conflict: What's gender got to do with it? %A Weiner, Arlen R. %8 2005-06-20 %I Tufts Archival Research Center %R http://localhost/files/3r0755552 %X Feminist security scholars have argued that conflict and peace are gendered activities and gender must be incorporated more systematically into conflict analyses. However, the examination of gender has been largely absent in environmental conflict literature. Through an analysis of two case studiesthe Cauvery River dispute in India and pastoralist conflicts in Turkana, Kenyathis thesis explores the gender impacts of each conflict, the gender symbolism of the natural resources parties are fighting over, and the structure of gender in society and government. The ultimate goal of the research is to bridge the gap between two sets of conflict analyses and provide a more comprehensive view of environmental security. This thesis concludes that a better understanding of the relationship between gender and environmental management is necessary for designing effective policies and programs for environmental sustainability by promoting involvement of all stakeholders. If environmental management is key for preventing conflicts, then a gender-neutral policy approach to environmental conflict is flawed from the outset. Gender mainstreaming in environmental conflicts is a necessary policy prescription for achieving sustainable peace and security and promoting gender equality and women's empowerment. %[ 2022-10-07 %~ Tufts Digital Library %W Institution