Briefly in English

HomeFront – Feminist analysis of the ‘home’ as a site of militarisation in Finland

HomeFront examines how Finland’s rapid militarisation since 2022 is experienced, negotiated and sometimes challenged in everyday life. Using the concept of home as a key lens, the project explores how gender, care and domestic spaces shape, and are shaped by, broader security shifts linked to geopolitical disruption, Finland’s NATO membership and militarisation at all levels of society.

The project combines feminist peace research, visual and ethnographic methods as well as memory studies to analyse how militarisation is normalised in mundane spaces and national memory politics in Finland. At the same time, it investigates how feminist utopian thinking can can offer alternatives to militarised ways of thinking.

HomeFront consists of four interconnected work packages:

  1. Everyday impacts of NATO presence in Mikkeli, focusing on how local residents experience the arrival of NATO’s Multi-Corps Land Component Command (MCLCC).
  2. Gendered care in “soldiers’ homes”, examining the voluntary work of “green sisters” as providers of home‑like care within military institutions.
  3. Memory politics of home in war museums, analysing how museum narratives shape ideas of belonging, national identity and militarisation.
  4. Feminist utopias of home, imagining alternative, demilitarised futures through participatory methods.

HomeFront is based at the Tampere Peace Research Institute and funded by the Research Council of Finland.