วาทกรรมทางศาสนาและความมั่นคงทางเพศในภาคใต้ของประเทศไทย

This article describes the complexity of applying human security through the notion of
gender equality in southern Thailand where violent conflict has been prevalent for nearly
half a century in a Malay-Muslim-dominated society. It explores how the concepts of
gender and security have been interpreted in Malay-Muslim leaders’ outlooks. To define
security more broadly, the article surveys the various notions of peacebuilding dealing
with comprehensive human security and any security threat, thus not limited to state
of war or physical violence only. In the prolonged armed violence and conflict, like that
faced in Thailand’s Deep South, women’s security and their role in peacebuilding emerge
as pertinent concerns. The discontinuities within the narratives of women and security
highlight a divergence connected to personal-political imaginations of conflict whereby
subtle variations in violent conflict can be seen as the products of different policy
prescriptions, local cultural norms, and the project outcomes of women groups supported by governmental organizations and national and international donors. Thus, in order
to reflect upon how contemporary security notions are framed, gendered security perceptions ought to be considered as they signify the exercise of peacebuilding programs in the local context. Persistent advocacy of gender equality is about cultural change, which
eventually becomes a modality for non-violent society
 
Details: Religious discourse and gender security in southern Thailand