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Men and Masculinities, Vol. 10, No. 1, 99-119 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1097184X06291896

Peacekeepers, Masculinities, and Sexual Exploitation

Paul Higate

University of Bristol, United Kingdom, Paul.Higate{at}bristol.ac.uk

My aim in this article is to analyze a set of gendered power relations played out in two postconflict settings. Based on interviews with peacekeepers and others, I argue that sexual exploitation of local women by male peacekeepers continues to be documented. I then turn to scholarly considerations of peacekeeper sexual exploitation, some of which accord excessive explanatory power to a crude form of military masculinity. This is underlined by similarly exploitative activities perpetrated by humanitarian workers and so-called "sex tourists." In conclusion, I argue that a form of exploitative social masculinities shaped by socioeconomic structure, impunity, and privilege offers a more appropriate way to capture the activities of some male peacekeepers during peacekeeping missions. Finally, in underlining the conflation of military masculinities with exploitation, I pose the question of how to explain those military men who do not exploit local women while deployed on missions.

Key Words: gendered power relations • male peacekeepers • military masculinities • exploitative social masculinities


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