Jannis Kappelmann

@JannisK
56 Followers
44 Following
11 Posts
Researcher& PhD student @ Uni Hamburg | Young Fellow @ DGAP | nuclear weapons, norms, gender | 1st gen | he, him

Is it just all about #girlpower?!
Read our new full-size article “Experts, activists, and girl bosses of the nuclear apocalypse: feminisms in security discourse” #onlinefirst and #openaccess here:

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s42597-023-00100-3

Experts, activists, and girl bosses of the nuclear apocalypse: feminisms in security discourse - Zeitschrift für Friedens- und Konfliktforschung

Having long been regarded as irrelevant to the high politics of foreign affairs, feminism and gender equality have in recent years gained increased attention in international security debates, including discussions about nuclear weapons policy. Several governments have adopted official feminist foreign policy postures, international security institutions have launched inquiries into gender equity and representation, and a myriad of security actors have enthusiastically embraced the language of women’s empowerment. Mapping the various modes of purported feminist practice on display in the nuclear policy field, we find that being “pro women” has become a sought-after rhetorical asset on both sides of the nuclear weapons debate. Reflecting wider trends in the corporate world, constituents of the nuclear weapons industry have increasingly embraced liberal feminist language and workplace diversity goals. These practices, we suggest, have helped challenge the perception of the nuclear industry as overly masculine, aiding recruitment to, and overall political legitimation of, the nuclear weapons enterprise. This development is significant because it functions to undercut the association between feminism and opposition to nuclear weapons, thus complicating efforts to advance arms control and disarmament through feminist interventions.

SpringerLink
This paper is part of our SI 'Gender and Disarmament: Feminist Approaches to Arms, Arms Control, Disarmament and their Role in Peace and Conflict' with our guest editors Nancy Ehrenberg-Peters, @JannisK, Daniel Plesch and Henrietta Wilson.

A new article “Represented But Not Always Heard: An Analysis of the Progress of Gender Equality at the United Nations through the Lens of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons” by Maritza Chan and Eloisa Romani is online!

#openaccess and online first:
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s42597-023-00095-x

Represented but not always heard: an analysis of the progress of gender equality at the United Nations through the lens of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons - Zeitschrift für Friedens- und Konfliktforschung

Gender inequality has always been a structural problem at the United Nations. The voices of women as well as those of non-binary people and marginalised communities have always been present but often never truly heard. The elevation of some female perspectives has not remedied the fact that the voices of most women and disadvantaged groups remain secondary to the traditionally male-oriented narrative of politics and power that is the foundation of the UN system. This paper interrogates the progress of incorporating feminist and humanitarian concerns in UN processes through the lens of the 2017 UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW)—heralded as the first “gender-sensitive” international nuclear weapons agreement. The paper will draw from different points of criticisms within feminist international relations theory to argue that women’s representation in multilateral negotiation processes does not constitute positive progress towards their interests if gender-sensitive disarmament policies are not implemented.

SpringerLink

This paper is part of our Special Issue ‘Gender and Disarmament: Feminist Approaches to Arms, Arms Control, Disarmament and their Role in Peace and Conflict’ with our guest editors Nancy Ehrenberg-Peters, @JannisK, Daniel Plesch and Henrietta Wilson.

Enjoy reading!
#ZeFKo #PeaceAndConflict #InternationalRelations #Feminism #NuclearWeapons #TPNW #UnitedNations #Women #WPS

This paper is part of our SI 'Gender and Disarmament: Feminist Approaches to Arms, Arms Control, Disarmament and their Role in Peace and Conflict' with our guest editors Nancy Ehrenberg-Peters, @JannisK, Daniel Plesch and Henrietta Wilson.

This paper is part of our Special Issue ‘Gender and Disarmament: Feminist Approaches to Arms, Arms Control, Disarmament and their Role in Peace and Conflict’ with our guest editors Nancy Ehrenberg-Peters, @JannisK, Daniel Plesch and Henrietta Wilson.

#ZeFKo #PeaceAndConflict #InternationalRelation #Feminism #NuclearHistory #Narrative

3/5 “Reform of death-making policies and institutions will not save humanity or the planet: only abolition, and investment in alternatives of care and solidarity, can give us a fighting chance.”

1/5 The first forum article of our new Special Issue is out now: “Abolition, not arms control: against reinforcing nuclear weapons through ‘reform’” by @rayacheson

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s42597-022-00080-w

Abolition, not arms control: against reinforcing nuclear weapons through “reform” - Zeitschrift für Friedens- und Konfliktforschung

Despite decades of persistent threats and harms caused by nuclear weapons, arms control continues to be the dominant paradigm through which to address the bomb, rather than disarmament. Drawing parallels with police and prison “reforms,” this article explores how arms control operates as a system of reform that reifies rather than liberates us from nuclear weapons. The article outlines how arms control steps that provide further support for and investments in nuclear weapons lead us away from disarmament, not toward it. It will also look at how diversity-related reforms co-opt communities into the nuclear-industrial complex, rather than work to transform that complex. The article posits that the abolition of nuclear weapons is the only adequate answer to the dangers posed by nuclear weapons, and suggests drawing upon the lessons from feminist, queer, and antiracist struggles against other institutions of state violence to achieve nuclear abolition.

SpringerLink
4/5 This paper is part of our Special Issue Gender and Disarmament: Feminist Approaches to Arms, Arms Control, Disarmament and their Role in Peace and Conflict with our guest editors Nancy Ehrenberg-Peters, @JannisK, Prof. Dr. Daniel Plesch and Henrietta Wilson. We are happy to have you on board!