Valerie M. Hudson is a University Distinguished Professor and holds the George H. W. Bush Chair in the Department of International Affairs of the Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University, where she directs the Program on Women, Peace, and Security. She is a coauthor of Sex and World Peace (Columbia, 2012) and The Hillary Doctrine: Sex and American Foreign Policy (Columbia, 2015), among others. Donna Lee Bowen is professor emerita of political science and Middle East studies at Brigham Young University. Her publications include Everyday Life in the Muslim Middle East (third edition, 2014). Perpetua Lynne Nielsen is professor of statistics at Brigham Young University.
The First Political Order offers the strongest possible proof that male control of reproduction-and the violence necessary to control women's bodies-is the first step in normalizing violence and hierarchy in every society. From now on, there will be no more separating questions of politics and peace from the treatment of the females. Those days are over. Thanks to Valerie Hudson and her team of global researchers, we have a long, practical, intimate way of diminishing violence and increasing democracy. -- Gloria Steinem The First Political Order's description of the pervasive damaging social consequences of institutionalized male dominance, based on a fascinating new dataset, makes devastating reading. The authors say that their findings should be foundational for any discussion about national or international security. Their argument is lucid, hugely important, and entirely convincing. -- Richard Wrangham, author of <i>The Goodness Paradox: The Strange Relationship Between Virtue and Violence in Human Evolution</i> In The First Political Order, Hudson and her collaborators make the case that the subordination of women is irrefutably tied to the well-being of a nation. Skeptical? The hard data is here, drawn from an exhaustive survey of 176 countries in the WomanStats project. This is the definitive work that ends the debate about the consequences of gender inequality. The focus now must shift to how we address a global syndrome that threatens us all. -- Ryan Crocker, former U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan The First Political Order is a magisterial tour de force that transforms our understanding of international relations. Hudson, Bowen, and Nielsen provide a comprehensive and meticulous examination of how the systematic subordination of women around the world affects every critical outcome in world politics, from governance and security to environmental, economic, and social development. In so doing, they demonstrate how personal decisions produce systemic political consequences. -- Rose McDermott, Brown University Convincingly argue[s] that the fate of a nation is tied to the status of its women. . . . The great achievement of this book is the extensive data underpinning its argument that the subordination of women anywhere undermines national security and stability everywhere. * Ethics and International Affairs * By exposing the shortcomings of political regimes across the globe and bringing into sharp focus how longstanding sexual inequalities work to exacerbate tensions and instability worldwide, The First Political Order makes a significant contribution to gender, development and security discourse. . . . Essential reading for scholars, policy makers, and students alike. * RUSI Journal *