Visitors: An American Feminist in East Central Europe
multilateral policy spaces. Let us not forget that on the twentieth anniversary of UNSCR 1325 last year, Russia proposed a draft resolution to the UNSC that, if passed, would have seriously diluted the hard-won advances of the past two decades. The resistance to the agenda, notably by antifeminist regional and transnational coalitions, is certainly one of the most serious threats that the WPS community is facing today. In the form of a conversation between Joy Onyesoh, Madeleine Rees, and Catia Cecilia Confortini – all affiliated with the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) – the last chapter tackles the question of co-optation and how feminist advocacy has a role to play in confronting this challenge. To conclude, while this cutting-edge volume fulfills its promise, the “new directions” referred to in the title could have been more explicitly defined and discussed; its contributions could have been more clearly highlighted with the addition of a conclusion bringing together the insights of the 14 chapters. New Directions in Women, Peace and Security nonetheless offers a remarkable and accessible overview of the current theoretical debates in the field, as well as the future research avenues and policy challenges of the constantly evolving WPS agenda.