Women in Cyprus
In this section you can find articles by (but not exclusively) Hands Across the Divide's members, regarding the condition of women in Cyprus.
Cross-ethnic contacts in protracted conflicts at the unofficial level a prerequisite for successful conflict resolution
By Maria Hadjipavlou
Cypriot Women's Initiative and Interventions for Peace and Gender Equality
By Maria Hadjipavlou
Men and women are assigned different roles and responsibilities regarding decisions to engage in armed conflict. Women are also absent when peace is to be decided. The impact on men and women also differs. Women have lower representation in political parties, elite groups, in parliaments, in the executive, judicial institutions, business organisations, or at the negotiating table, not due to lack of interest on the part of women but due to the structural violence in place, situational constraints or religious/traditionalist beliefs. Read all.
Drawing Lines and Marking Otherness: Women, Gender and the 'Cyprus Problem'
By Cynthia Cockburn
Gender, Conflict and Peace
By Maria Hadjipavlou
Imagining a post-Solution Cyprus: the Gender Dimension.
By Hands Across the Divide.
No Permission to Cross: Cypriot women's dialogue across the divide.
By Maria Hadjipavlou.
Peace Movements in Cyprus
By Pembe Mentesh
Today, Nicosia in Cyprus remains the world’s last divided capital city. In the last year, its barricades and
checkpoints have provided the backdrop for the island’s largest mobilisation of civilians on each side of the
divide, since partition occurred in 1974. The peace movements in Cyprus are striving for a united,
democratic Cyprus in the lead up to accession to the European Union. Their role is to challenge the existing
power politics paradigm, revive collective identity, and demonstrate the need for peaceful co-existence if
Cyprus as a whole, is to become a legitimate member of the international community. Read all.
The Visibility and Civil Participation of Women in Cyprus.
By Magda Zenon.
Cyprus is a divided island in conflict. And as is common in such societies, women’s issues and voices are usually silenced as the national issue takes precedence over all other questions.
Everything in Cypriot society is viewed within the narrow focus of “the national problem”, and all-important issues in daily life, including health, education, women’s development and gender discrimination, do not get the attention they deserve or are marginalized. This identification with the national problem and with specific ethnicity in a patriarchal society such as Cyprus deprives women of other choices in relation to their self-definition as individuals or as a part of a gender group. It is thus not surprising that gender inequality has never been addressed as a social and political issue. The conflict is viewed as genderless, implying men’s and women’s experiences of the conflict are the same, or if they are seen as different, only the official male discourses are heard. Read all.
UNSCR 1325 in Cyprus
By Magda Zenon and Maria Hadjipavlou
Since 1974 Cyprus has been a divided island, with the south (the Greek Cypriot side) being under effective control of the government of the Republic of Cyprus, and the north (the Turkish Cypriot side) controlled by a Turkish Cypriot Administration and the presence of the Turkish army. Since
March 2008 peace negotiations for a comprehensive settlement have been held between the leaders of the two main communities in Cyprus under the auspices of the special representative of the United Nations in Cyprus. The first phase of the negotiations ended in early August 2009.
The second phase, which has been labelled ‘a give–and-take’ process, began in early September. During the early months of the first phase, working groups and committees of experts were set up by the two leaders to facilitate work in the various sections of the negotiations, such as governance, property, security, the EU, and cultural heritage. What is evident from the composition of these working groups is the negligible presence of women. Read all.
What Vision can Women Bring to the Peace Process?
By Cynthia Cockburn
I'm very happy to be here in Cyprus after a break of four or five years. The time that I was closely involved with you all, when I was doing research here, was between 2001 and 2003. I'd arrived at a time when the partition was total, when the line was something that, although I myself could cross whenever I wanted, on foot, carrying a British passport, very very few Cypriot people either of North or South could, or would choose, to do so. Read all.
Women of Cyprus at the Crossroads between Traditionalism, Modernity and Post modernity
By Maria Hadjipavlou.
The World of New Parents
By Pembe Mentesh
Surveys can reveal a lot about a specific topic, and provide significant insight into the way society thinks and feels. What was unexpected from this particular survey was the wonderful anecdotes and stories that Cypriot women shared about their birthing experience and the early months following the birth of their baby.
Whilst the survey did not receive enough responses to qualify as a statistically representative research, it did reveal some trends and practices which are worthy of further research, investigation and follow-up action.
This article presents some of the main findings and shares some of the real experiences and comments that came out of the survey. It also highlights differences between the birthing experiences of Greek-Cypriot and Turkish-Cypriot women. Read all.

