Abstract

<p>Few institutions have historically presented more defined gender boundaries than the military. This study examines gender and war through the lens of military combat roles. Military combat roles have traditionally relied on and manipulated ideas about masculinity and femininity. Women arrive in the army with different types of capital and bring with them a shared cultural ‘tool kit’ (womanhood). Following the military’s labour allocation process, they are assigned combat roles, which is at variance to their gendered character. Assignment in non-traditional feminine roles means crossing gender boundaries. Ethnographic studies of the Kenya Defence Forces operations in Somalia reveal the different gendered characteristics of the military roles as reflected in the women’s soldiery experiences. The encounter with military power and authority challenges the women soldiers to redefine their feminine capital, to interpret the military reality via a gendered lens and, therefore, to critically (re)examine the patriarchal order. Grounded on the twin theoretical frameworks of socio-cultural capitals and cultural scripts, and structured on a gender framing of women’s military roles, the study illustrates the complex and contradictory realities of women in the army. The study unpacks the relationship between masculinity and femininity, and, war and the military. It underpins the value of the female soldier as a figurative illustration of the complex interrelations between the gendered politics of masculinity and femininity. It considers what the acts, practices and performances constitutive of female soldiering reveal about particular modes of governance, regulation and politics that arise from the sacrifices of soldiers in combatant.</p><p align="center"> </p>

Highlights

  • Few institutions have historically presented more defined gender boundaries than the military

  • This study examines gender and war through the lens of military combat roles

  • The study comes to a similar conclusion as Cilliers et al (1997) that despite formal policy provisions stipulating that women have an open career path in the military, there still appears popular resistance to women serving in combat roles in Kenya. This reservation often rests on the perceived unsuitability of women for ‘masculine roles.’. Such perceptions are revealed by questions such as: War involves the risk of death and are women not more vulnerable to attacks? What will happen to women soldiers if they are captured by the enemy? Women have to deal with certain physical and biological realities and does this not hinder their performance in combats?

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Summary

Gendered Perceptions and Integration in the Military

Women were recruited into the post-colonial Kenya military for the first time in 1972, but they belonged to the women’s only military unit: the Women Service Corps (WSC). Some of these conditions included unwritten policies that women soldiers were not allowed to marry, become pregnant or have children while in service They were not even supposed to be seen to be romantically involved with their male colleagues, or even with men outside the military (Daily Nation, 2011c). Women are subject to the same selection and training procedures and no ranks are exclusively reserved for men They can marry, become pregnant (even when single) and carry out soldiery duties alongside their male counterparts in any of the departments in the Kenya Army, Airforce or Navy (Daily Nation, 2013). Military recruitment in Kenya is guided by the one third-gender rule in the Constitution (CoK, 2010), which states that no more than two-thirds of members of public bodies shall be of the same gender These foundations are grounded on the need to see women as key actors and agents for change in society. A gender analysis of the military demonstrates that even with a substantive increase of women into the military structures, they tend to take on masculine roles resulting in an entrenchment, rather than transformation of traditional sexist ideologies (Juma & Makina, 2008; Barno, 2014; Daily Nation, 2011b)

KDF Liberating Somalia
Theoretical Frameworks
Methodology
Female Combatants Crossing Gender Boundaries or Challenging Masculinities?
Technology and Warfare
Conclusion
Full Text
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