An Intersectional Analysis of Syrian Women’s Participation in Civil Society in the Post-2011 Context

Based on qualitative research conducted in Lebanon and Turkey in 2018, this paper centers on Syrian women  working in various civil society organizations (CSOs) in the Syrian post-2011 context. It examines conflict and host-context impacts on Syrian women’s participation in CSOs. Using an intersect...

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Main Author: Dima Al Munajed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Center for Near and Middle Eastern Studies 2020-07-01
Series:Middle East : Topics & Arguments
Subjects:
Online Access:https://meta-journal.net/article/view/8252
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spelling doaj-cee3a2be2e994058876953a7662515182020-11-25T03:04:39ZengCenter for Near and Middle Eastern Studies Middle East : Topics & Arguments2196-629X2020-07-011410.17192/meta.2020.14.8252An Intersectional Analysis of Syrian Women’s Participation in Civil Society in the Post-2011 ContextDima Al Munajed0Univeristy of Bonn - ZEF Based on qualitative research conducted in Lebanon and Turkey in 2018, this paper centers on Syrian women  working in various civil society organizations (CSOs) in the Syrian post-2011 context. It examines conflict and host-context impacts on Syrian women’s participation in CSOs. Using an intersectional framework derived from feminist studies, it argues that gender, socioeconomic status and ethnic/national identity are key intersecting social markers that influence the ability of Syrian women to participate in CSOs in these countries. Findings also demonstrate the value of intersectional approaches in improving our current understanding of discriminatory practices against Syrian women in civil society. https://meta-journal.net/article/view/8252SyriaConflictCivil SocietyGenderIntersectionality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dima Al Munajed
spellingShingle Dima Al Munajed
An Intersectional Analysis of Syrian Women’s Participation in Civil Society in the Post-2011 Context
Middle East : Topics & Arguments
Syria
Conflict
Civil Society
Gender
Intersectionality
author_facet Dima Al Munajed
author_sort Dima Al Munajed
title An Intersectional Analysis of Syrian Women’s Participation in Civil Society in the Post-2011 Context
title_short An Intersectional Analysis of Syrian Women’s Participation in Civil Society in the Post-2011 Context
title_full An Intersectional Analysis of Syrian Women’s Participation in Civil Society in the Post-2011 Context
title_fullStr An Intersectional Analysis of Syrian Women’s Participation in Civil Society in the Post-2011 Context
title_full_unstemmed An Intersectional Analysis of Syrian Women’s Participation in Civil Society in the Post-2011 Context
title_sort intersectional analysis of syrian women’s participation in civil society in the post-2011 context
publisher Center for Near and Middle Eastern Studies
series Middle East : Topics & Arguments
issn 2196-629X
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Based on qualitative research conducted in Lebanon and Turkey in 2018, this paper centers on Syrian women  working in various civil society organizations (CSOs) in the Syrian post-2011 context. It examines conflict and host-context impacts on Syrian women’s participation in CSOs. Using an intersectional framework derived from feminist studies, it argues that gender, socioeconomic status and ethnic/national identity are key intersecting social markers that influence the ability of Syrian women to participate in CSOs in these countries. Findings also demonstrate the value of intersectional approaches in improving our current understanding of discriminatory practices against Syrian women in civil society.
topic Syria
Conflict
Civil Society
Gender
Intersectionality
url https://meta-journal.net/article/view/8252
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AT dimaalmunajed intersectionalanalysisofsyrianwomensparticipationincivilsocietyinthepost2011context
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