About the Film
ABOUT THE ISSUE
Women have become primary targets in today’s armed conflicts and are
suffering unprecedented casualties. Simultaneously, they are emerging
as necessary partners in brokering lasting peace and as leaders in
forging new international laws governing conflict. Yet the image of war
portrayed by the media covers very little of either end of this
spectrum — until now. Discussions about the multiplicity of women’s
roles in war and peace are underway in boardrooms, conference halls,
and on the floor of the U.N., but the media has lagged behind, offering
images of women in conflict situations that are rarely nuanced and
portraying them solely as collateral damage — when they are seen as “a
story” at all.
ABOUT THE SERIES
WIDE ANGLE and THIRTEEN are planning a bold new mini-series Women, War & Peace
to challenge the conventional wisdom that war and peace are men’s
domain. Women, War & Peace will focus on
women’s strategic role in the post-Cold War era, where globalization,
arms trafficking, and illicit trade have intersected to create a whole
new type of war.
PBS, THIRTEEN, and WIDE ANGLE are proud to be the first to bring this conversation to primetime national television. Planned for broadcast early next year, Women, War & Peace will be the most comprehensive global media initiative ever mounted on the roles of women in war and peace. Women, War & Peace will present its groundbreaking message across the globe using all forms of media, including U.S. and international primetime television, radio, print, and web.
Women, War & Peace is spearheaded by producers Gini Reticker, Abigail Disney, and Pamela Hogan. The 5-part series will include the U.S. television premiere of Reticker and Disney's previous collaboration, the acclaimed Pray the Devil Back to Hell, about the role women played in bringing peace to Liberia after 14 years of civil war. The film won Best Documentary Prize at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival, the Silverdocs Witness Award, the Jackson Hole Audience Award, and was short-listed for the Academy Award for best documentary.


