MENA

Front and Rear: The Sexual Division of Labor in the Israeli Army

Citation:

Yuval-Davis, Nira. 1985. “Front and Rear: The Sexual Division of Labor in the Israeli Army.” Feminist Studies 11 (3): 649-75. doi:10.2307/3180123.

Author: Nira Yuval-Davis

Topics: Combatants, Female Combatants, Gender, Women, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Equality/Inequality, Military Forces & Armed Groups Regions: MENA, Asia, Middle East Countries: Israel

Year: 1985

The Silenced Outcry: A Feminist Perspective from the Israeli Checkpoints in Palestine

Citation:

Naaman, Dorit. 2006. “The Silenced Outcry: A Feminist Perspective from the Israeli Checkpoints in Palestine.” National Women’s Studies Association Journal 18 (3): 168–80.

Author: Dorit Naaman

Abstract:

This paper discusses the activities of Machsom Watch, a human rights organization of Israeli women who visit the checkpoints in the occupied West Bank daily to monitor the army's operation of the checkpoints and intervene when possible. The paper examines the presence of Israeli women at the checkpoints vis-à-vis both Israeli soldiers and Palestinian civilians, and it explores some gendered aspects of the occupation, as manifested in the checkpoints and in the activities of Machsom Watch.

Topics: Armed Conflict, Gender, Women, Military Forces & Armed Groups Regions: MENA, Asia, Middle East Countries: Israel, Palestine / Occupied Palestinian Territories

Year: 2006

Les Contrebandières: Woman as Smuggler

Citation:

Boraki, Chemseddoha. 2001. “Les Contrebandières: Woman as Smuggler.” Women: a Cultural Review 12 (2): 176-91.

Author: Chemseddoha Boraki

Abstract:

The summer of 1999 marked the end of an era in Morocco. For the majority of the Moroccan people political power had rested in the hands of one man for their entire lives. That man was King Hassan II and he was now dead. While he was a monstrous tyrant in the eyes of some, for many he was to be deeply mourned as a man who represented a link in a royal chain that could be traced back to the prophet Muhammed and as such was the embodiment of the faith, the Commander of the Faithful. It was to be Hassan's task to bring Morocco into the modern world, and sultan became king. This arduous task, however, necessitated a blunt and brutal approach to crush tribal dissidence and proletarian insurrection. Nonetheless, as his son Muhammed VI was inaugurated, the legacy of Hassan's passion for a united kingdom was evident in the political landscape. Before his death Hassan had made some amends with the demons he himself had unleashed. Prisoners of conscience were being freed, oppositional voices were being heard and new democratic structures were slowly being put in place. In effect, the ground had been laid for his son to take the nation in new directions. One of these was an increased attention to the position of women in Moroccan society. As her brother was being prepared for his new position in life, Lalla Meryem, Hassan's eldest daughter, was receiving wide coverage in the press for any number of initiatives and pronouncements. That such a highly placed woman should speak out was not simply the timely intervention of a dutiful daughter. To those familiar with Morocco, names such as that of Fatima Mernissi and Zakya Daoud will already be familiar. Both these writers had been asking difficult questions about the position of women in Moroccan society for several decades. Films such as Jillali Ferhati's Reed Dolls (1981) and The Beach of Lost Children (1991) played a similar role in questioning the society's treatment of women. In fact Moroccan fiction, right at its inception, in Driss Chraibi's first work Le Passé simple (1956), had sought to understand the dynamics of patriarchal family life and the role of the mother, a theme that echoes in the writing of Tahar Ben Jelloun. More recently the independence struggle has been seen from the perspective of a woman in the fascinating account of the period given in Leila Abouzeid's semi-autobiographical novel Year of the Elephant, which was excerpted in this very journal, or her more recently translated memoir Return to Childhood. So Lalla Meryem's intervention was perhaps not so surprising. What was more surprising was the appearance, at the same time, of reviews of an avowedly feminist collection of essays in newspapers such as Le Matin du Sahara, a paper widely seen as the mouthpiece of the government. The book was a collection of articles edited by Aïcha Belarbi and entitled Initiatives féminine. It was published by the small Casablanca publishing house Editions Le Fennec and is the latest in a list of publications about Moroccan women that stretches back to Portraits de femmes, published in 1987. That such a publication can achieve such a review speaks as much for the potential for change in Moroccan society as the pronouncements of the new king. Women: a cultural review would like to introduce the collection to English-speaking readers by translating one of the chapters in the book. Chemseddoha Boraki's 'Les Contrebandières' takes up the intriguing economic theme of smuggling in northern Morocco. Through the use of memory, literature and observation it interrogates both the role of smuggling in a country such as Morocco and the part played by women in that particular trade. Its conclusion demands that the image and position of women within Moroccan society be profoundly rethought.

Topics: Economies, Gender, Women, Patriarchy, Governance, Rights, Women's Rights, Trafficking Regions: Africa, MENA, North Africa Countries: Morocco

Year: 2001

Selective Memory, Gender and Nationalism: Palestinian Women Leaders of the Mandate Period

Citation:

Fleischmann, E. L. 1999. "Selective Memory, Gender and Nationalism: Palestinian Women Leaders of the Mandate Period." History Workshop Journal, no. 47, 141-58. 

Author: E.L. Fleischmann

Topics: Civil Society, Gender, Women, Gendered Power Relations, Governance, Nationalism, Political Participation Regions: MENA, Asia, Middle East Countries: Palestine / Occupied Palestinian Territories

Year: 1999

From Perversion to Pathology: Discourses and Practices of Gender Policing in the Islamic Republic of Iran

Citation:

Bahreini, Raha. 2008. “From Perversion to Pathology: Discourses and Practices of Gender Policing in the Islamic Republic of Iran.” Muslim World Journal of Human Rights 5 (1): 1-51.

Author: Raha Bahreini

Abstract:

The Islamic Republic of Iran punishes homosexuality with death but it actively recognizes transsexuality, and partially funds sex change operations. This article aims to examine how this seemingly progressive stance on transsexuality is connected to the IRI's larger oppressive apparatus of gender. It will first provide an overview of the cultural politics of gender and sexuality under the Islamic Republic's rule, and will then discuss the confluence of religious and medical literatures that led the Islamic Republic to adopt its new discourse on transsexuality despite – or perhaps rather because of – its sex/gender politics. The article does not deny that this emerging discourse has been somewhat empowering for those transsexuals who genuinely desire surgical transformation. But empowering as it might have been for such transsexuals, the emerging discourse is still deeply troubling since it systematically regards homosexuality and more generally any sexual or gender non-conformity as unintelligible, perverse, and punishable by law, except for those willing to transform their "wrong bodies." The article will, therefore, demonstrate that the IRI's permission of transsexuality and sex change operations is motivated by a goal that is more about assimilating gender atypical individuals into the heteronormative order than about broadening horizons for sex/gender possibilities. The article ends by discussing how this discourse is making non-surgical trans/multi-gendered identity illegible and illegitimate not only as a publicly recognized possibility, but also with regard to transpersons' own self-perception and self-constitution of their gender and sexual subjectivity.

Keywords: homosexuality, Transgender, transsexual, the Islamic Republic of Iran, sex change surgery

Topics: Gender, Women, Men, Justice, LGBTQ, Religion, Sexuality Regions: MENA, Asia, Middle East Countries: Iran

Year: 2008

Housing Environment and Women’s Health in a Palestinian Refugee Camp

Citation:

Al-Khatib, Issam A, Rania N Arafat, and Mohamed Musmar. 2005. “Housing Environment and Women’s Health in a Palestinian Refugee Camp.” International Journal of Environmental Health Research 15 (3): 181-91.

Authors: Issam A Al-Khatib, Rania N Arafat, Mohamed Musmar

Abstract:

This study was carried out during January and February 2002 in Al- Ein Refugee Camp in Nablus city in Palestine. Interviews were held with 150 women of different age groups and different marital status. The results show a positive relationship between women’s physical and mental health and housing conditions. There is a statistically significant relationship between the family size represented by the number of children in the household, the number of children that sleep in one room, and the number of children that sleep in one bed, the house size, and number of rooms and women’s feeling of privacy (mental health and well-being). Most of the houses in the camp are unhealthy and overcrowded. The family income is very low and there is a general poor health status of women in the camp. Most of the women do not know the conditions of a healthy house. The study shows the importance of housing reforms on the health of the family in general and women’s health in particular, mainly in refugee camps.

Topics: Refugees, Refugee/IDP Camps, Economies, Gender, Women, Health, Mental Health, Households Regions: MENA, Asia, Middle East Countries: Palestine / Occupied Palestinian Territories

Year: 2005

Women's Organizing and the Conflict in Iraq since 2003

Citation:

Al-Ali, Nadje, and Nicola Pratt. 2008. “Women’s Organizing and the Conflict in Iraq since 2003.” Feminist Review 88: 74–85.

Authors: Nadje Al-Ali, Nicola Pratt

Abstract:

This article examines the development of a women’s movement in Iraq since the invasion in 2003. It describes the types of activities and the strategies of different women activists, as well as highlighting the main divisions among them. The article also discusses the various ways in which the ongoing occupation and escalating violence in Iraq has shaped women’s activism and the object of their struggles. Communal and sectarian tensions had been fostered by the previous regime as well as by the political opposition in exile prior to 2003, but the systematic destruction of national institutions, such as the army and the police, by the occupation forces, has led to a flare-up of the sectarian conflict. The article concludes by evaluating women’s activism in terms of its contributions to conflict on the one hand and national reconciliation on the other.

Keywords: Iraqi women's movement, Iraqi women's rights activists, post-invasion Iraq, occupation, violence, sectarian politics

Topics: Armed Conflict, Civil Society, Gender, Women, NGOs, Political Participation, Rights, Women's Rights Regions: MENA, Asia, Middle East Countries: Iraq

Year: 2008

Demands for Electoral Gender Quotas in Afghanistan and Iraq

Citation:

Nordlund, Anja Taarup. 2004. “Demands for Electoral Gender Quotas in Afghanistan and Iraq.” Working Paper, Department of Political Science, Stockholm University, Stockholm.

Author: Anja Taarup Nordlund

Topics: Gender, Governance, Quotas Regions: MENA, Asia, Middle East, South Asia Countries: Afghanistan, Iraq

Year: 2004

Palestinian Women's Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights in a Longstanding Humanitarian Crisis

Citation:

Bosmans, Marleen, Dina Nasser, Umaiyeh Khammash, Patricia Claeys, and Marleen Temmerman. 2008. “Palestinian Women’s Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights in a Longstanding Humanitarian Crisis.” Reproductive Health Matters 16 (31): 103–11. doi:10.1016/S0968-8080(08)31343-3.

Authors: Marleen Bosmans, Dina Nasser, Umaiyeh Khammash, Patricia Claeys, Marleen Temmerman

Abstract:

This paper results from a study conducted in the Occupied Palestinian Territory in September 2002 to test the usefulness of a guide for a comprehensive approach to sexual and reproductive health rights and needs of refugee women. In-depth interviews with key informants from 19 organisations and two focus group discussions were carried out in the West Bank and Gaza. Three refugee camps were visited as well as five health facilities. The findings revealed that severe restrictions on mobility had reduced access to health facilities for both staff and patients in a significant way. For pregnant women, this had resulted in decreased access to antenatal and post-natal care and an increasing number of home deliveries, induced deliveries and deliveries at military checkpoints. Lack of donor interest and withdrawal of donor support were mentioned as hampering the implementation of the National Reproductive Health Guidelines, and the sustainability and quality of existing sexual and reproductive health services. Family planning had become a politically sensitive issue, and there were indications of increased gender-based violence. Lack of access to reproductive health services was the most visible aspect of the impact of the conflict on women's sexual and reproductive health. Little attention is paid to the less visible evidence that women's reproductive rights have been subordinated to the political situation.

Topics: Displacement & Migration, Refugees, Gender, Women, Gender-Based Violence, Health, Reproductive Health Regions: MENA, Asia, Middle East Countries: Palestine / Occupied Palestinian Territories

Year: 2008

A Women’s Non-Movement: What It Means to Be a Woman Activist in an Islamic State

Citation:

Bayat, Asef. 2007. “A Women’s Non-Movement: What It Means to Be a Woman Activist in an Islamic State.” Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 27 (1): 160-72.

Author: Asef Bayat

Topics: Feminisms, Gender, Women, Patriarchy, Religion, Rights, Women's Rights Regions: MENA, Asia, Middle East Countries: Iran

Year: 2007

Pages

© 2024 CONSORTIUM ON GENDER, SECURITY & HUMAN RIGHTSLEGAL STATEMENT All photographs used on this site, and any materials posted on it, are the property of their respective owners, and are used by permission. Photographs: The images used on the site may not be downloaded, used, or reproduced in any way without the permission of the owner of the image. Materials: Visitors to the site are welcome to peruse the materials posted for their own research or for educational purposes. These materials, whether the property of the Consortium or of another, may only be reproduced with the permission of the owner of the material. This website contains copyrighted materials. The Consortium believes that any use of copyrighted material on this site is both permissive and in accordance with the Fair Use doctrine of 17 U.S.C. § 107. If, however, you believe that your intellectual property rights have been violated, please contact the Consortium at info@genderandsecurity.org.

Subscribe to RSS - MENA