Millar, Katharine M.
ORCID: 0000-0003-2511-5325
(2025)
Gender, sexuality, warfighting & the making of American citizenship post-9/11.
Daedalus.
ISSN 0011-5266
(In Press)
|
Text (Daedalus_Millar_Gender Sexuality Warfighting and the Making of US Citizenship Post911)
- Accepted Version
Pending embargo until 1 January 2100. Available under License Creative Commons Attribution. Download (296kB) |
Abstract
The so-called global war on terror marked a pivotal moment in the intersection of gender, sexuality, military service, and U.S. warfighting. This essay explores, via paradigmatic empirical incidents, three key dimensions of gendered warfare–military service, support for the military, and protest/dissent–to reveal a central paradox in the post-9/11 U.S. gender-war system. While military service has declined overall, efforts to formally include women and LGBTQ+ people in the armed forces have coincided with the ongoing valorization of a narrow, gendered ideal of soldiering and citizenship (often cisgender, heterosexual, masculine, and white). Despite (potentially temporary) increased formal equality and inclusion, the global war on terror reinforced the existing U.S. heteropatriarchal sex-gender order, characterized by a mandatory heterosexuality and binary, deterministic account of gender. This model of gendered, martial citizenship promotes civilian deference to the military and subverts the democratic oversight of the armed forces.
| Item Type: | Article |
|---|---|
| Divisions: | International Relations |
| Date Deposited: | 31 Oct 2025 15:42 |
| Last Modified: | 03 Nov 2025 09:24 |
| URI: | http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/130026 |
Actions (login required)
![]() |
View Item |

Download Statistics
Download Statistics