This paper analyzes the present and future impact of the Arab Spring movement on women\u27s rights and representation in government in the Middle East. It compares two countries: Tunisia, which experienced democratization as a result of the Arab Spring, and Morocco, which remains a monarchy. After a qualitative and quantitative analysis, this paper concludes that although the Arab Spring has thus far had a modest impact on women\u27s rights and representation in government in Tunisia, if current trends hold, we will likely see improvements in Tunisian women\u27s status in the future
As the world turns it attention to Tunisia as the first state to undergo the democratic transition i...
This paper explores the failure of women's organizations to effect the improvement of the status of ...
During the Arab Spring, Moroccan men and women first took to the streets on February 20, 2011 to dem...
Arap dünyasında 2011 yılında halk ayaklanmaları başlamıştır. Tunus, Mısır ve Libya’daki rejim karşıt...
With the 2011 “Arab Spring”, the issue of women’s empowerment has emerged as a parallel movement in ...
More than six years have passed since the tumultuous weeks that comprised the key moments of the Ara...
The Arab Springs were a series of revolutions that took place in the Middle East which first came ab...
With the 2011 “Arab Spring”, the issue of women’s empowerment has emerged as a parallel movement in ...
The social movement known as the Arab Spring brings together various groups, including educated wome...
With the 2011 “Arab Spring”, the issue of women’s empowerment has emerged as a parallel movement in ...
The proposed research seeks to contribute to contemporary feminist debates and dialogues in its expl...
Les droits des femmes constituent un sujet vaste et complexe, à l’intersection de plusieurs discipli...
The uprisings that led to regime change during the early period of the Arab Spring were initially in...
According to Huntington’s (1991) theory of “reverse democracy”, countries undergoing (or having unde...
It is widely believed that women in the Middle East suffer more discrimination than their counterpar...
As the world turns it attention to Tunisia as the first state to undergo the democratic transition i...
This paper explores the failure of women's organizations to effect the improvement of the status of ...
During the Arab Spring, Moroccan men and women first took to the streets on February 20, 2011 to dem...
Arap dünyasında 2011 yılında halk ayaklanmaları başlamıştır. Tunus, Mısır ve Libya’daki rejim karşıt...
With the 2011 “Arab Spring”, the issue of women’s empowerment has emerged as a parallel movement in ...
More than six years have passed since the tumultuous weeks that comprised the key moments of the Ara...
The Arab Springs were a series of revolutions that took place in the Middle East which first came ab...
With the 2011 “Arab Spring”, the issue of women’s empowerment has emerged as a parallel movement in ...
The social movement known as the Arab Spring brings together various groups, including educated wome...
With the 2011 “Arab Spring”, the issue of women’s empowerment has emerged as a parallel movement in ...
The proposed research seeks to contribute to contemporary feminist debates and dialogues in its expl...
Les droits des femmes constituent un sujet vaste et complexe, à l’intersection de plusieurs discipli...
The uprisings that led to regime change during the early period of the Arab Spring were initially in...
According to Huntington’s (1991) theory of “reverse democracy”, countries undergoing (or having unde...
It is widely believed that women in the Middle East suffer more discrimination than their counterpar...
As the world turns it attention to Tunisia as the first state to undergo the democratic transition i...
This paper explores the failure of women's organizations to effect the improvement of the status of ...
During the Arab Spring, Moroccan men and women first took to the streets on February 20, 2011 to dem...