Introduction - Megan MacKenzie & Nicole Wegner1. Giyira: Indigenous Women's Knowing, Being, and Doing as a Way to End War on Country - Jessica Russ-Smith2. One for All, All for One: Taking Collective Responsibility for Ending War and Sustaining Peace - Heidi Hudson3. Feminist Organising for Peace - Sarai B. Aharoni4. Piecing up Peace in Kashmir: Feminist Perspectives on Education for Peace - Shweta Singh & Diksha Paddar5. Learn from Kurdish Women's Liberation Movements to Imagine the Dissolution of the Nation-State System - Eda Gunaydin6. Queer Our Vision of Security - Cai Wilkinson7. Abolish Nuclear Weapons: Draw on Feminist, Queer, and Indigenous Theory and Experiences to Support Movements to End Nuclear Weapons - Ray Acheson8. Make Foreign Policies As If Black and Brown Livs Mattered - Yolande Bouka9. Draw on Ecofeminist and Indigenous Scholarship to Reimagine the Ways We Memorialise War - Sertan Saral10. Engage With Combatants as Interlocutors for Peace, Not Only As Authorities on Violence - Roxani Krystalli11. Recognize the Rights of Nature - Keina Yoshida12. Create Just, Inclusive Feminist Economies to Foster Sustainable Peace - Carol Cohn & Claire Duncanson13. Change How Civilian Casualties are 'Counted' - Thomas Gregory14. Listen to Women When Creating Peace Initiatives - Laura J. Shepherd
Megan MacKenzie is Professor of Feminist International Relations and Critical Security Studies at the University of Sydney. She is the author of Beyond the Band of Brothers: The US Military and the Myth that Women Can't Fight(CUP, 2015). Nicole Wegner is an expert in the fields of gender and war, as well as critical military studies.