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The Media’s Role in Limiting Women’s Development


Posted by samya on 05 Jul 2011 / 0 Comments
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I was following with interest media commentaries on the recent experts meeting on women’s media empowerment convened by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia in Beirut (ESCWA). It was clear that independent communication campaigns to promote women’s causes and concerns are gaining a lot of ground in the Arab World. New digital […]

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On sexual slavery and the question of what makes something ‘Islamic’


Posted by alicia on 28 Jun 2011 / 0 Comments
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Salwa al-Mutairi, a Kuwaiti politican, gave a cold-blooded proposal for Muslim men to take female slaves, especially non-Muslim female prisoners of war, for sexual use (or rather rape). It has rather unpredictably come under fire. Slavery is one of the most abhorrent forms of abuse of power in this modern age. But the basic principles […]

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Saudi Women Set Their Sights on the Right to Vote


Posted by emanhashim on 22 Jun 2011 / 0 Comments
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Last March, Saudi authorities stated that half the seats in the municipal council in the next September 2011 run would be elected, rather than selected by the monarch himself as usual. But when they implemented elections, they neglected to include women’s votes. When asked why, the kingdom’s electoral commission mentioned it was because of logistic-related […]

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Bhutto: A One-Sided Look at a Complicated Woman


Posted by azra on 21 Jun 2011 / 0 Comments
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BHUTTO is the definitive documentary that chronicles the life of one of the most complex and fascinating characters of our time. Hers is an epic tale of Shakespearean dimension. It’s the story of the first woman in history to lead a Muslim nation: Pakistan. –Synopsis from the film’s website Duane Baughman and Johnny O’Hara’s 2010 […]

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Updates: Amina Abdullah and Eman al-Obeidi


Posted by Krista Riley on 10 Jun 2011 / 0 Comments
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Two important updates on stories that we have covered over the past couple months! First, Sara Yasin wrote recently about a blog called “A Gay Girl in Damascus,” where Syrian-American blogger Amina Abdullah Arraf has been writing about the revolution in Syria.  Amina Abdullah Arraf was allegedly abducted on June 6, and has not been heard from.  Many news […]

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The DSK Rape Victim is Everything but a Victim, According to the Media


Posted by sarahaji on 08 Jun 2011 / 0 Comments
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The media response to the Dominique Strauss-Kahn rape charges is predictably horrific. The salacious gossip can maintain itself for weeks: the victim lives in a complex for HIV-positive residents (no wait! She doesn’t); wears hijab; and is “pious and respectable.” No, you say, she’s not unattractive—she’s actually got great breasts? A full 57% of French […]

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Manal Al-Sharif and the Ban on Saudi Women Driving


Posted by emanhashim on 01 Jun 2011 / 0 Comments
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Last week, Manal Al-Sharif was arrested because she posted a video of herself driving around Alkhobar, Saudi Arabia, on YouTube. Because it is illegal for women to drive in Saudi Arabia, both she and her brother were detained. Al-Sharif has since been released, having pledged to take no further part in the Women2Drive campaign. The Women2Drive […]

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A Gay Girl in Damascus Tells It Like It Is


Posted by sarayasin on 31 May 2011 / 0 Comments
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Amina Abdullah is being celebrated as the unlikely voice of Syria’s revolution. She is a 35-year-old Syrian-American woman living in Damascus. On her blog, she writes candidly about her life as a lesbian in Syria. She garnered international attention after a post describing how her father was in an altercation with the state police. Abdullah’s […]

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Arab Women: They’re in Niqabs, Gettin’ in Ur Democracy


Posted by fatemeh on 19 May 2011 / 0 Comments
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The Atlantic featured this picture on its latest magazine, which includes an article about the Arab Spring and the future of democracy in the region. The article does talk briefly about women’s rights in the region, but it seems hardly fitting that there should be a woman wearing niqab on the cover with the fearmongering […]

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The Sexy Business of Political Uprisings: Sijal Hachem’s “Khalas”


Posted by ethar on 17 May 2011 / 0 Comments
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I lived through a revolution. I saw my 21-year-old brother holding a gun. I slept with a knife under my pillow. I have a close friend who was shot and is now blind in one eye. I was lucky. I didn’t have thugs break into my house. I wasn’t tear-gassed. I wasn’t shot at. But I […]

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