In light of India’s G20 Presidency and the EU-India strategic partnership, the Foundation’s initiative, WISCOMP – in collaboration with the Delegation of EU to India, and the India International Centre (IIC) – organized a roundtable with women diplomats and policy experts from EU and India. One of the first dialogues of its kind, the roundtable reinforced WISCOMP’s substantive engagement with changing the contours and vocabulary of gender-sensitive diplomacy and foreign policy. The dialogue addressed questions like what unique skill-sets do women bring to diplomacy and foreign policy? How do women diplomats negotiate peace, strengthen diplomatic relations, navigate challenging postings in areas of conflict, and facilitate intercultural linkages? What are the similarities and differences between the perspectives of European and Indian women diplomats?
Excerpt from the dialogue–
“A feminist foreign policy in our region would embrace the idea of a South Asian commons; it would speak and act in favour not of ravaging disunities, but of rationalising unities; of merging capacities to build, to develop, to link. It would weigh the interests of humanitarianism against the interests of power. It would feel the true pulse of the unknown, the marginalised, the excluded, understanding the economics of proximity rather than promoting proximity as a peril” – Ambassador Nirupama Rao