Reconstructing Gender: Iraqi women between dictatorship, war, sanctions and occupation
Al-Ali, Nadje
Date: 27 June 2007
Journal
Third World Quarterly
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This article explores the role of Iraqi women in reconstruction
processes by contextualising the current situation with respect to changing
gender ideologies and relations over the past three decades. Before discussing
the Iraqi case specifically, I provide a brief theoretical background about the
significance of gender in ...
This article explores the role of Iraqi women in reconstruction
processes by contextualising the current situation with respect to changing
gender ideologies and relations over the past three decades. Before discussing
the Iraqi case specifically, I provide a brief theoretical background about the
significance of gender in reconstruction as well as nation-building processes. A
historical background aims to shed light on the changing gender ideologies and
relations during the regime of Saddam Hussein. The article focuses particularly
on the impacts of the early developmental – modernist discourses of the state
and the impacts of war (Iran – Iraq war 1980 – 88, Gulf wars 1991, 2003) as
well as on the comprehensive economic sanctions regime (1990 – 2003). The
latter involved wider social changes affecting women and gender relations but
also society at large because of the impoverishment of the well educated middleclass,
wide-scale unemployment, an economic crisis and a shift towards more
conservative values and morals. It is against this historical background that
contemporary developments related to ongoing conflict, occupation and political
transition affect women and gender relations.
Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0