Women In The Middle East Nov2005

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Women in the Middle East: Common Threads and Diversity of Experience

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Women In The Middle East Nov 2005 Common Threads and Diversity of Experience

Transcript of Women In The Middle East Nov2005

Page 1: Women In The Middle East Nov2005

Women in the Middle East:

Common Threads and

Diversity of Experience

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Common Threads

• Fewer women than men in public life

• Fewer women than men in the public workforce

• Higher rates of female illiteracy

• Lower rates of female education

• Patriarchal system in the home and in public life

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Female Illiteracy

Female literacy in the MENA region has tripled since the 1970s, but half the women in the region still cannot read or write.

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Women’s Participation in the Formal Work Force & Politics

• About 80 percent of men participate in the formal workforce; only about 33 percent of women (in the MENA region)

• About 3.5 % of parliamentary seats are occupied by women (lowest % in the world)

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Patriarchy: a system that privileges males and elders, giving males legal and economic power over his family members.  In broader terms, the extension of male dominance over women in

society in general. 

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Patriarchal system• Public:

• Public office• Court testimony• Dress codes• Segregated work spaces• Limitations on movement

• Private: • Last names• Child custody• Divorce/marriage laws• Freedom of movement & employment

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Variations in Experience

A Bedouin girlMoroccan women demonstrating.

Some Iranian women.

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Differences•National

•Legal•Employment

•In Turkey, one in three doctors & lawyers is a woman; about 40% of Istanbul Stock Exchange traders are women

•Literacy

•Regional•Class and status•Cultural

Saudi Arabia

4%

Egypt 30%

Turkey 35%

Table 1: Percentage of women in the labor force

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Source: Freedom House

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A Turkish mayoral candidate greets locals at a Diyarbakir market.

Photo: NF Watts, 03/04

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Regional Diversity – a Turkish case

Map of Turkey; inset map of Turkey’s southeastern provinces

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Regional diversity• Literacy:

• 78 % literacy for women in Turkey overall (92 % men);

• Southeast Turkey, only 55 % women literate.

• Education: • 92% girls in elementary school in Turkey

overall; • only 75% in the Southeast

• Marriage: • in the Southeast, 20% girls marry before age

15 (highly uncommon in the rest of Turkey)

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Class differences: Jobs and status

Former Prime Minister Tansu Çiller

Female employee at a carpet restoration center in Turkey.

Market woman in central Turkey. My friend Selin making

pottery.

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Diversity in Dress: “Veiling” and the headscarf

•Veiling and exclusion from work NOT synonymous

•Full-body covering not specifically required in the Quran

•Historically, veiling primarily an upper-class luxury

Village women in southeast Turkey.

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What do we mean by “veiling”?

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Types of head and body cover

Hijab: Head scarf

Chador: Full body cover

Drawings from the Seattle Times

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Types of body covering cont.

A burqa

Hindu woman covering face with sari or other covering.

Niqab, the face veil.

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Head and body fashion, images

Palestinian woman in Gaza

American Muslim woman showing difference between the Niqab (left) and the Hijab (right)

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Hijab Fashion

Abbayas from Al-Iman Fashion

Hijabs from Al-Iman Fashion

Hijab & Abaya from alKaram fashion

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Why do women veil?What does it mean for them?

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Other perspectives?

• Covering as empowerment

• Assertion of women’s rights

• “Post-modern” reaction

• Local custom

• Peer or family pressure

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Clothing and the Quran

• "Say to the believing man that they should lower their gaze and guard their modesty; that will make for greater purity for them; and Allah is well acquainted with all that they do. And say to the believing women that they should lower their gaze and guard their modesty; and that they should not display their beauty and ornaments except what must ordinarily appear thereof; that they should draw their veils over their bosoms and not display their beauty except to their husbands..."

(Qur'an 24:30-31)