Women's Activism in Africa
In: Journal of women, politics & policy, Band 39, Heft 4, S. 518-520
ISSN: 1554-4788
3382 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Journal of women, politics & policy, Band 39, Heft 4, S. 518-520
ISSN: 1554-4788
In: Remembering the modern world
Introduction -- Suffragists & suffragettes -- Revolutionary nationalists -- Workers -- The grandmothers -- Marching on
In: The black scholar: journal of black studies and research, Band 36, Heft 1, S. 1-1
ISSN: 2162-5387
In: American Social and Political Movements of the 20th Century Ser.
In: Women & politics, Band 21, Heft 4, S. 144-146
ISSN: 0195-7732
In: Mobilization: the international quarterly review of social movement research, Band 3, Heft 1, S. 130-132
ISSN: 1086-671X
In: Al-Raida Journal, S. 72-77
Women's Activism and Participation in Lebanon was the subject of a round table discussion held at the Institute for Women's Studies in the Arab World last October. The participants were Lina Abou Habib, Iqbal Doughan, Linda Matar, Mona Khalaf, Zoya Rouhana, and Dima Dabbous-Sensenig. The moderator was Marguerite Helou.
In Ethiopia a woman's identity is linked to her family and the prescribed gender role as a mother and home-maker, yet throughout Ethiopia's history there are examples of women who have roles that extend beyond the home and family into public, political life. This paper briefly describes this dominant gender identity of Ethiopian women before charting the changes to Ethiopian politics and women's place within them. It discusses how the shift to democratic politics opened new spaces for women's civil society activism. However, more recent political moves towards greater repression of civil society have closed the space for women's public, political activism, leaving the future of women's public role in question.
BASE
In: Agenda, Heft 52, S. 17
This thesis examines indigenous women's activism against the so-dubbed 'Monsanto law', in Guatemala, in 2014. It aims at informing about the gendered aspects of activism that have been eluded in other research. Scientific inquiry was utilised to analyse this social phenomenon via its associated discourses in the media, more specifically from news articles written about it. The data consists of articles published online by independent and mainstream media outlets. It comprehends articles written in English and Spanish; from circa 50 initial articles collected, seven were analysed. Critical Discourse Analysis was the method utilised to analyse the discourses present in the data. The subject was chosen due to the fact that it is about Global South indigenous women's activism, and it is a struggle against a law that was an outcome of a free-trade agreement, CAFTA-DR. Being passed, the law would dictate the Guatemalan agricultural sector dependency on big American agrochemical and genetic engineering corporations, thus collocating at stake the indigenous and peasants' lives, land ownership and food sovereignty. Moreover, this is a case in which the activism achieved its intents, enhancing my motivation toward its analysis. The purpose of the study was to determine how did indigenous women's activism against the 'Law for the Protection of New Plant Varieties' manifest itself and how did gender, sex, race/ethnicity and class make part of that activism, unfolding the gendered aspect of this activism and formulating an understanding about a form of non-violent activism that worked toward the promotion social justice and equality. Intersectionality is the methodology utilised to explore the multiple dimensions of the phenomenon and the coalition politics that emerge from it, whilst questioning canons. Hence, the theoretical framing initiates by acknowledging and analysing discourses and practices of racialisation/ethnicity, along with gendering, language, class differentiation, and religion regarding the Maya people in Guatemala, to understand how subjectivities and social differences are produced. The second part of the theoretical analysis concerns the structures of domination, such as patriarchy, racism or colonialism, and the power relations enmeshed in them. This theoretical framework is followed by the actual analysis of the data. The data analysis shows that indigenous women's activism manifested itself at different levels; from activism towards the protection of Nature, the body-territory, the Maya identity symbolised by the corn and the indigenous people's right to food sovereignty. The research also reveals that gender, sex, race/ethnicity and class are all intermeshed in the activism of these women against the 'Monsanto law' in the same manner as they are intermeshed in the everyday lives of indigenous women in Guatemala. These aspects shape indigenous women's lives, collocating them both at the margins of the social system and in the front row of every struggle towards social justice simultaneously. One conclusion that emerges is that, even though indigenous women are leading the resistance to colonial structures and neoliberal policies, the level of awareness regarding their struggle is very low; it is diluted within indigenous people's activism as if it were a homogenous whole. A second important inference is that indigenous women's activism, as in the phenomenon at study, is what truly leads to the (return) to sustainability as a way of living.
BASE
In: Studies in Feminist Philosophy Ser.
Informed by practices of women's activism in India, this book proposes a feminist social justice framework to address the wide range of issues women face globally, including economic exploitation, sexist oppression, racial, ethnic, and caste oppression, and cultural imperialism. Using an interdisciplinary approach, the book argues that current frameworks for global justice, such as human rights, need to be supplemented by a relational framework that includes resistance to economic exploitation and social oppression.
In: Palgrave pivot
In this book, the author draws on over a decade of first-hand experience as an academic-activist and on interviews with women in Malaysia's women's rights movement. Despite a considerable array of challenges to their participation in the public and political spheres, the movement is especially vibrant. Presenting insights from feminist activists in Malaysia, the book explores the Women's Candidacy Initiative's efforts to promote independent women in Parliament; the work of women's coalition the Joint Action Group for Gender Equality; how activists understand and experience the concept of feminism; and finally the place of men in feminism. Women's Activism in Malaysia will be of interest to students and scholars across a range of disciplines including gender studies, politics and sociology.
In: Journal of women's history, Band 33, Heft 1, S. 163-170
ISSN: 1527-2036