posted on 2024-09-06, 07:36authored byNeloufer de Mel
This article points to the significant military turn that has taken place in Sri Lanka following the
armed conflict between the Sri Lanka government forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). It
is particularly concerned with the impacts on gender relations and how the lines between women’s
insecurity and militarised masculinity have been redrawn and reinforced. It argues that these gender
relations can be seen in sharp relief in the country’s Free Trade Zones, where young rural women in the
garment industry and young rural men who join the military meet, and where features of transnational
labour, violence against women, law and the state combine to reinforce globalisation and militarisation as
the twin rationalities upon which national security regimes and the global order rest today. The article
discusses resistances to this paradigm, and assesses their successes and failures in the context of how security is currently marketed as a public good and militarism as a path to the ‘good life’. It concludes by pointing to how these constructions have elicited consent on the part of a significant segment of Sri Lankan society to the militarisation of its society as a whole.
Funding
Default funder
History
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Citation
de Mel, N. (2009) Gendering the New Security Paradigm in Sri Lanka, IDS Bulletin 40.2, Brighton: IDS