ByNiall GilmartinNUI Maynooth
The Feminist DebateNationalism: An Institution of Patriarchy?
Nationalism is male-led institution built upon patriarchy and sexism. (Enloe1990 & Nagle 2005)
Women play a symbolic role in Nationalist Ideology. The nation’s ‘Sons’ fighting to protect the ‘Motherland’.
Women become biological reproducers of the nation; Cultural transmitters
Women’s empowerment through nationalist movements is temporary; in post-conflict, patriarchy and ‘gender norms’ quickly reassert themselves.
Nationalist cause always takes precedence over gender equality.
Nationalism: A Feminist tool for Gender Equality
Conflict and Nationalism allows women to come out into the male-led public sphere
Nationalism creates spaces where women can further the aims and objectives of the feminist agenda.
Feminist agenda can be successfully pursued alongside the nationalist agenda.
Current literature from Palestine, North of Ireland, South Africa all concur that women are empowered political agents due to their involvement in nationalist struggles (Al Labadi 2003, Aretxaga 1997, O’Keefe 2003 Sharoni 2010)
Main Argument
Current feminist debate is whether or not women’s empowerment during conflict is temporary or not.
I argue that nationalist movements can empower women and further the aims of feminism.
Crucially, in the context of the feminist debate, I argue that the equalities and powers won by women during conflict, can be carried over into post-conflict societies.
Methodology & Sample
Using the North of Ireland as a case study, I interviewed a sample of eight republican women.
Primary data based on semi-structured interviews.All interviewees were active republicans during the
conflict.All are currently politically active in both formal and
informal politics.Snowball sampling technique.
Research Questions
Where are republican women today?Are they still politically active?Have their roles changed, strengthened or diminished as
the North of Ireland continues towards a post-conflict society?
If so, why and in what ways?Crucially, is there evidence of a post-conflict regression in
women’s empowerment?
Republican Women during the ‘Troubles’
Conflict fragments ‘traditional’ gender roles.
Women felt they played an equal and central role in the Republican Movement
Civil Rights, Falls Rd. Curfew, Internment, Armagh Gaol, Street Protests, IRA Volunteers, Cumann na mBan, Sinn Féin
Findings & Analysis
All interviewees are politically active todayFull time activists across formal and informal politicsSinn Féin, Community Groups, Women’s Groups,
Conflict Victims Groups.All assert that they are empowered activists due to their
involvement in the conflict.Their current role is a direct continuation of that same
struggle for political equality and social justice.
Findings & AnalysisDuring conflict, all were members of a homogenous
movement; IRA and Sinn Féin.Now branched into other spheres of informal politics.Community Groups, Drug rehabilitation, Social Justice,
Domestic Violence, Women’s Reproductive Rights.While ‘national cause’ initially politicised women, they
now branched off into other areasWhy? Why not continue with Sinn Féin?
Findings & Analysis2007 IRA formally ends campaignRepublicans fully embrace constitutional, electoral politics.Rigid, formal & male-dominated structures.Republican Movement’s new strategy also means new barriers
for republican womenFormal versus Informal Politics: State and party politics rigid
and slow to affect change; out of touch with the people; male-led culture; child-care issues, working hours.
Informal politics is new, radical, affects change quicker, empowering, dynamic.
Findings & AnalysisFormal Politics presents new
challenges to republican women.
SlowOutdatedPatriarchalIneffective“A relic of the past that needs
to be dismantled if women are to achieve fully political equality”
Republicans went from challenging the state to becoming the state.
Conclusion
•Republican Women are full time political activists today.•Nationalism acted as political ‘springboard’ to empower women to challenge other inequalities.•Formal, rigid politics caused some post-conflict regression, not nationalism.
Conclusion•Nationalism-power, citizenship, democracy, equality.•Women need to be at the centre of such movements.•Nationalism can augment and further the aims of the feminist agenda-both causes working alongside each other.•Women can use nationalism to confront and challenge patriarchy both within nationalism itself and in wider society.•The republican women in this research have successfully demonstrated the benefits that such a challenge yields.