Nov 27, 2025
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South Asian Women Leading the Way in Peacebuilding & Crisis Response
- South Asian women are reshaping diplomacy through empathy, equity, and local knowledge, offering care-centred responses to war, climate crises, and displacement.
- Grassroots peacebuilders in Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Nepal, and India are creating inclusive models of governance and reconciliation, often filling the gaps left by formal diplomatic processes.
- Feminist diplomacy across South Asia is moving from token participation to genuine transformation, calling for institutional recognition of women’s leadership in peace, security, and environmental policy.
Author: Pragyan Srivastava
Disclaimer: This piece was originally published on Sapan News.
As the world faces deepening geopolitical conflicts, ecological collapse, and democratic backsliding, feminist diplomacy has emerged as an urgent, transformative force, particularly in South Asia, where women continue to be at the forefront of peacebuilding, conflict resolution, and gender-responsive governance.
In an open letter to the United Nations Secretary-General titled “Women, Peace, and Security at a Crossroads: A Call for Urgent Engagement”, Sri Lankan peacebuilder Visaka Dharmadasa along with other alumnae of the United Nations Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs (DPPA) course on Women in Ceasefire Negotiation (2024) highlight the crisis facing the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda.
“Across conflict-affected regions, women are leading humanitarian responses, sustaining communities, facilitating local peace initiatives, and advocating for protection and accountability. Many of us in this network are engaged in these efforts firsthand — not in theory, but in practice. Yet despite the centrality of women’s contributions, they remain consistently excluded from the formal diplomatic processes that shape their countries’ futures.”
Drawing from decades of grassroots work with conflict-affected families, her letter urges the international community to act decisively to safeguard and advance the hard-won gains of feminist peacebuilding. “The failure to engage women meaningfully at peace tables is not just a democratic deficit, it’s a security risk,” the letter states.
Visaka Dharmadasa talking about South Asia’s rich cultural heritage in ‘Sapan Stories’
Watch the video here
Across South Asia, similar patterns emerge. In Pakistan, initiatives led by women, such as those in tribal jirgas in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, a province of Pakistan, and women-centred local governance efforts during the Indus Waters Treaty dialogues, offer case studies of inclusive peacebuilding. In Sri Lanka, post-war reconciliation has been driven significantly by Tamil and Sinhala women’s groups addressing wartime trauma and advocating for transitional justice. According to the International Crisis Group, while official mechanisms often exclude women, informal networks have played a pivotal role in community healing.
In India’s northeast, Naga women’s peace coalitions have transformed conflict narratives by centring community needs over militarism.
Meanwhile, in Nepal, young women peacebuilders, supported by UN Women, have carved out space in transitional justice frameworks after a decade-long armed conflict, pushing for the implementation of UNSCR 1325.
South Asian feminist voices are calling for a shift from tokenism to transformation. The path forward lies in institutionalising women’s participation across diplomatic, security, and environmental policymaking. Whether it’s building back peace in Sri Lanka, safeguarding water rights in the Indus basin, or protecting Rohingya women refugees in Bangladesh, South Asia’s feminist peacebuilders are not just responding to crises; they are redefining what peace means.
Our Take
Pragyan’s article shows how women across South Asia hold the everyday architecture of peace from local negotiations and family support to community networks when institutions fall short. These efforts show how reconciliation and security actually take shape. Yet the same women rarely have seats where national decisions are made. At Faith Futures Collective, we see value in paying close attention to this gap. Sharing these stories is one way to recognise the depth of women’s contributions and to question why their knowledge is kept at the margins. When the lived experience of women peacebuilders becomes part of public understanding, it strengthens the push for approaches to leadership and justice that are rooted in care, accountability and everyday realities.
