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Blog: Global Voices
Women in Pakistan's major cities, such as Islamabad, Lahore, Karachi, and Multan, rallied on International Women's Day, demanding gender equality, justice, and safety, challenging patriarchal norms for the seventh consecutive year.
Blog: Global Voices
"I don't believe feminism should strive for matriarchy, which doesn't translate to equality, but for the equal acceptance of everyone as human beings, regardless of gender."
In: Edinburgh Studies on Modern Turkey Series
In: Global studies quarterly: GSQ, Band 4, Heft 1
ISSN: 2634-3797
Abstract
After two decades of effort to embed Women, Peace, and Security (WPS), why and how did the agenda fail to transform patriarchal gendered structures and prevent the regression of women's rights and security in Afghanistan? To address this question, the paper investigates how the WPS agenda was conceptualized and operationalized in Afghanistan. We apply Kandiyoti's concept of patriarchal bargains to analyze multi-level power dynamics across four peace and conflict phases between 2001 and 2022, drawing from primary and secondary sources, including interviews with women leaders and key experts. While 20 years of engagement could not be expected to transform the country's conservative gender order, we argue that WPS efforts lacked a grounded understanding of the gendered constraints in a conflict transition as well as a political strategy for achieving its goals. While the case of Afghanistan is unique, it is nonetheless highly relevant to other settings making significant investments in WPS. For advancing WPS, the paper suggests that the international normative framework must be connected to local voices that understand the context-specific, patriarchal power dynamics and how to bargain with them to achieve outcomes and gains for women's security and rights.
In: Cambridge review of international affairs, S. 1-30
ISSN: 1474-449X
In: Journal of contemporary African studies, S. 1-22
ISSN: 1469-9397
In: Social identities: journal for the study of race, nation and culture, S. 1-4
ISSN: 1363-0296
In: Canadian military journal: Revue militaire canadienne, Band 23, Heft 3, S. 22-29
ISSN: 1492-0786
TBA
In: The China quarterly, S. 1-2
ISSN: 1468-2648
In: American political science review, S. 1-17
ISSN: 1537-5943
This study examines how protesters' gender shapes public reactions to protests and protest repression. Using an original survey experiment, I demonstrate that protests involving extensive participation by women are perceived as less violent and meriting of repression than male-dominated protests. But perceptions of female protesters vary. Patriarchy-defiant female protesters like feminists are deemed more deserving of repression despite being perceived as equally likely to be peaceful as female protesters who emphasize patriarchy-compliant femininities, such as women who highlight their roles as mothers and wives. This, I show, is because patriarchy-defiant women are viewed as more immoral, which renders their protest accounts less trustworthy when they clash with government propaganda seeking to legitimize repression. These findings underscore the value of disaggregating the binary category of man or woman when examining sentiments toward political agents and of considering stereotypes when studying perceptions, and ultimately the risks and effectiveness, of protest movements.
Blog: Reason.com
Plus: Chatbots vs. suicidal ideation, Margot Robbie vs. the patriarchy, New York City vs. parents, and more...
This book offers a striking and pointed reflection on what histories of masculinity in modern Britain have been and where they might go next. Addressing the constant contemporary talk of crisis around men's lives, Men and Masculinities argues powerfully that we need histories of masculinity which are present-centred and politically engaged. In so doing, it sets out a new agenda for the field. Ranging over the past 130 years, a series of engaging and original essays trace how men, like masculinity, were made. In exploring that process, contributors demonstrate the radically different ways in which men made sense of the world and their place in it. The book provides compelling evidence of how individual life stories can transform how we think about the time- and place-specific formation of men's experiences and ideas of masculinity. Through vivid case studies that include trans men's encounters with the welfare state, the experience of wounded Jamaican servicemen, and the social world of the public librarian, the volume interweaves histories of masculinity with wider histories of society, culture, economy, and politics. It is on that basis that the work shows how thinking critically about histories of masculinity also provides new ways of understanding the making and remaking of modern Britain. Men and Masculinities both provides a critical genealogy for contemporary gender politics and the persistence of patriarchy and male power and establishes new ways of understanding how men's lives and ideas of masculinity have (and have not) changed in modern Britain.
In: Routledge Jewish studies
Introduction: anonymous portraits -- Social skin in Roman-Byzantine Syro-Palestine -- Ritual purity in medieval Ashkenaz -- Sacred space in Papal Avignon and the Comtat Venaissin -- Marriage and divorce in Israeli film -- Conclusion: patriarchy and feminism.
Men and masculinities provides a critical overview of ongoing debates in the history of masculinities and the making of men s lives and ideas of masculinity in Britain between the 1890s and present day.It proposes a new agenda, urging histories to reflect on the enduring influence of patriarchy in contemporary Britain