A Voice at the Table: How Women in Peace Processes Shape Political Representation


Journal article


Kristen Aanstoos
Politics & Gender, 2026

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Cite

APA   Click to copy
Aanstoos, K. (2026). A Voice at the Table: How Women in Peace Processes Shape Political Representation. Politics &Amp; Gender.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Aanstoos, Kristen. “A Voice at the Table: How Women in Peace Processes Shape Political Representation.” Politics & Gender (2026).


MLA   Click to copy
Aanstoos, Kristen. “A Voice at the Table: How Women in Peace Processes Shape Political Representation.” Politics &Amp; Gender, 2026.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{kristen2026a,
  title = {A Voice at the Table: How Women in Peace Processes Shape Political Representation},
  year = {2026},
  journal = {Politics & Gender},
  author = {Aanstoos, Kristen}
}

 Abstract: Women’s political representation is a key indicator of peace and stability in post-conflict states, but we do not yet fully understand the factors that lead to sustained increases in women’s representation after conflict. This article proposes and tests a new variable affecting changes in women’s legislative representation in post-conflict states: types of women’s participation in the peace process. Using multivariate regressions, this study finds that local women’s participation in high influence roles and in both Track I and II processes significantly increases women’s representation after conflict, while international women in peace processes do not. Women’s movements only increase women’s representation after conflict in combination with local women in peace processes. These findings illustrate one important outcome of local women’s inclusion in peace processes and highlight the importance of inclusive peace processes for post-conflict democratic outcomes. 

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