Gwyn Kirk
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Gwyn Kirk is a sociologist specialising in gender studies, ecofeminism and women's peace organisations and teaching at American colleges and universities. She is a peace activist having first been an active participant in the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp, which opposed the siting of cruise missiles with nuclear warheads in Britain.
Kirk grew up in Great Britain. She received a BA in sociology from the University of Leeds in 1967 and a diploma in town planning from what is now Leeds Beckett University. In 1980 she received a PhD in political sociology from the London School of Economics, with a thesis titled "Urban Planning in a Capitalist Society". She taught in the UK for five years and was an organiser and activist in community campaigns in Inner London, opposing gentrification. She spent time in Papua New Guinea, Malawi, Tanzania and Peru exploring issues of Third World women and development.[1][2]
Activism
In the 1980s, she was an active participant in the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp. She filmed some of the actions and interviewed women living at the peace camp or involved in the wider network. She raised funds to support the feminist and peace movements, writing articles and giving lectures in the UK and the US. She is a founding member of Women for Genuine Security[3] and the International Women's Network Against Militarism. She is a founder member of the East Asia-US-Puerto Rico Women's Network Against Militarism.[4][5]
In 1982, Kirk moved to the United States at the time when 14 Greenham women, including her, filed a lawsuit against the US Government in a federal court in New York. The suit, eventually unsuccessful because it was deemed to be "political", sought an injunction to stop cruise missiles being sent to England, arguing that deployment of the missiles violated international law forbidding the aggressive use of weapons that did not distinguish between civilians and military personnel, and denied US constitutional rights to life and liberty.[5][6][7][8]
Career
Kirk divides her time between teaching, research, publishing, and advocacy. She has taught courses on gender and sociology at universities and colleges such as Antioch College, where she chaired the Women's Studies Program (1992–1995), Colorado College, Hamilton College, Mills College at Northeastern University, Rutgers University, the University of Oregon, Pitzer College, Sonoma State University, and the University of San Francisco. She received a Rockefeller Fellowship at the University of Hawaii (2002). Her research has included study of the impact of military operations on the environment [3][9][10]