CURRICULUM VITAE: HEIDI HUDSON
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
Chapters in books
· Peace building through a gender lens and the challenges of implementation in Rwanda and Côte d’Ivoire. In Sjoberg, L. (ed). Gender and International Security. Feminist Perspectives. London & New York: Routledge, 2010:256-279.
· Gender, Peacebuilding and Post-Conflict Reconstruction in Africa: Breaking the Chain between Inequality and Violence. In The State of Africa. Post-conflict Reconstruction and Development, edited by D. Kotze, & H. Solomon. Pretoria: Africa Institute of South Africa, 2008:9-29.
· Peacekeeping trends and their gender implications for regional peacekeeping forces in Africa: Progress and challenges. In Gender, Conflict, and Peacekeeping, edited by D. Mazurana, A. Raven-Roberts, & J. Parpart. New York: Rowman and Littlefield, 2005:111-133.
· Gender as a Tool for the analysis of the Human Security Discourse in Africa. In: Karamé, K. & Tryggestad, T.L. (eds.). Gender Perspectives on Peace and Conflict Studies. Oslo: NUPI, 2000:79-113.
Publications in accredited journals
· Continuity and Change: An Evaluation of the Democracy-Foreign Policy Nexus in Post-apartheid South Africa. Accepted for publication in Journal for Contemporary History 2010, 35(2):109-131.
· Peacebuilding through a Gender Lens and the Challenges of Implementation in Rwanda and Côte d’Ivoire. Security Studies 18, 2009:287-318.
· Jooste, C. & Hudson, H. Gender, Global Governance and the United Nations: From Principle to Practice? Journal for Contemporary History 2007, 32(1):173-191.
· Molete, N.T. & Hudson, H. South African Foreign Trade Policy and Economic Diplomacy in an Era of Globalisation. Journal for Contemporary History 2005, 30(1):65-84.
· ‘Doing’ Security As Though Humans Matter: A Feminist Perspective on Gender and the Politics of Human Security. Security Dialogue June 2005, 36(2):155-174.
· ‘Live and let die’ – a decade of contestation over HIV/AIDS, human security and gender in South Africa. Journal for Contemporary History 2004, 29(3):86-106.
· Changing notions of political community through subnational communication. Communitas. 2004, 9:63-78.
· Gender and the globalisation of violence: the treacherous terrain of privatised peacekeeping. Agenda, “Women in War”, 2004, no. 59:42-55.
· Globalisation and the state: trends and implications for international security. Tydskrif vir Geesteswetenskappe [Journal for the Humanities] March & June 2003, 43(1 & 2):35-46.
· Fractious Holism: the complex relationship between women and war. Acta Academica. Gender Supplementum: Gender, society and theory: the University of the Free State. 2002(1):113-146.
· Globalisation and security in the developing world: Towards a framework for analysis. Journal for Contemporary History. April 2002, 27(1):159-181.
· Women’s Security Needs versus Feminist Agenda? Implications of the Security-Environment-Gender Nexus. Journal for Contemporary History. June 2001, 26(1):136-150.
· Mainstreaming Gender in Peacekeeping Operations: Can Africa learn from international experience? African Security Review. 2000, 9(4):18-33.
· Weir, J., Hudson, H. & Radloff, A. 2000. Collaborative staff development for quality teaching and learning in the Free State. South African Journal of Higher Education. 14(2):161-168.
· The Role of Terrorism in Revolutionary Warfare: the Dilemma of the ANC. Journal for Contemporary History. June 1990, 5(1):31-46.
Other refereed articles and monograph contributions
· Victims, exploiters or conservationists? Contextualised dynamics of linking gender, security and environment. Mots Pluriels. No. 11. September 1999. http://www.arts.uwa.edu.au/MotsPluriels/MP1199hh.html (refereed electronic journal).
· Gender, Democracy and Development - A Response. ISS Monograph Series. August 1998, no.27:61-67.
· A Feminist Reading of Security in Africa. ISS Monograph Series. February 1998, no.20:22-98.
· Resource-based Conflict: Water (In)security and its Strategic Implications. IDP Monograph Series. October 1996, no. 6:3-16.
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