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Advancing Feminist Foreign Policy in the Multilateral System: Key Debates and Challenges

Authored by: Evyn Papworth

Categories: Statebuilding, The Field of Women, Peace and Security
Sub-Categories: Democratization and Political Participation
Region: No Region
Year: 2024
Citation: Papworth, Evyn. 2024. Advancing Feminist Foreign Policy in the Multilateral System: Key Debates and Challenges. International Peace Institute, March 2024. https://www.ipinst.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/2403_Advancing-Feminist-Foreign-Policyweb.pdf

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Executive Summary

Since the first feminist foreign policy (FFP) was adopted by Sweden in 2014, sixteen countries have either published an FFP or announced their intention to do so. While FFPs could help revitalize the multilateral system and ground it in feminist principles, debates have emerged over what they can and should encompass. To explore the future of FFPs, the International Peace Institute, in partnership with the Open Society Foundations and in collaboration with the co-chairs of the Feminist Foreign Policy Plus (FFP+) Group, Chile and Germany, convened a retreat on Feminist Foreign Policy and Multilateralism in July 2023.

Some proponents of FFPs have indicated that these policies can be a way to democratize and transform multilateralism, integrating feminist approaches and principles into multilateral institutions and leading to more inclusive and equitable outcomes. This requires seeing FFPs as not just a “women’s issue” but also as a way to reinvigorate an inequitable system through transformational change and the interrogation of entrenched power dynamics, including in areas such as trade, climate, migration, and disarmament.

One obstacle to realizing the potential of FFPs is that there is no single definition of feminist foreign policy. Part of the challenge is that there are many interpretations of feminism, some of which reflect a more transformative, systemic approach than others. Nonetheless, states have been working toward common guiding principles for FFPs. The FFP+ Group’s “Political Declaration on Feminist Approaches to Foreign Policy,” agreed in September 2023, illustrates state priorities while also mirroring some of the values emphasized by civil society, such as a focus on the root causes of inequality and a collaborative approach.