[W]e have a lot of problems here – torture, violations against street children, we are full of problems… To come in and talk about gays and lesbians, it is nice, but it’s not the major issue. It’s like I’m starving and you ask me what kind of cola I want. Well, I want to eat first. Then we can talk about cola! It’s a luxury to talk about gay rights in Egypt. (Negad El Borai, in an interview with Azimi 2006) In many developing countries, sexual rights are commonly depicted as trivial concerns pertaining to wealthy citizens of a ‘developed’ Western world. The ‘developing’ world is often thought to have more pressing problems to deal with, such as poverty, violence and corruption. As the prominent Egyptian attorney and human rights activist,...
This paper discusses cultural translations of international campaigns against Female Genital Cutting...
Mohamed Choukri’s biographical novel, Le Pain Nu, discusses his early life in the northern Moroccan ...
Fifteen years ago, there was little space within international development policy circles within whi...
Since the turn of the twenty-first century, the struggle for LGBTQ human rights has become a leading...
In recent years, LGBTQI rights have become central to debates around international development, huma...
In 2000, renowned Egyptian activist-sociologist Saad Eddin Ibrahim and 27 colleagues were tried, con...
This paper discusses cultural translations of international campaigns against Female Genital Cutting...
This paper discusses cultural translations of international campaigns against Female Genital Cutting...
While feminist movements have secured legal reforms that support gender equality in civil codes in M...
This discussion explores the processes by which cultures define notions of femininity, masculinity, ...
Negar Azimi’s “Prisoners of Sex” is a welcome reminder that human rights discourse should always kee...
In response to this insightful editorial, we wish to provide commentary that seeks to highlight rece...
The International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association’s (ILGA) annual report on l...
Egyptians who do not fit into the mold of the ideal, heteronormative citizen as perpetuated by the s...
Fifteen years ago, there was little space within international development policy circles within whi...
This paper discusses cultural translations of international campaigns against Female Genital Cutting...
Mohamed Choukri’s biographical novel, Le Pain Nu, discusses his early life in the northern Moroccan ...
Fifteen years ago, there was little space within international development policy circles within whi...
Since the turn of the twenty-first century, the struggle for LGBTQ human rights has become a leading...
In recent years, LGBTQI rights have become central to debates around international development, huma...
In 2000, renowned Egyptian activist-sociologist Saad Eddin Ibrahim and 27 colleagues were tried, con...
This paper discusses cultural translations of international campaigns against Female Genital Cutting...
This paper discusses cultural translations of international campaigns against Female Genital Cutting...
While feminist movements have secured legal reforms that support gender equality in civil codes in M...
This discussion explores the processes by which cultures define notions of femininity, masculinity, ...
Negar Azimi’s “Prisoners of Sex” is a welcome reminder that human rights discourse should always kee...
In response to this insightful editorial, we wish to provide commentary that seeks to highlight rece...
The International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association’s (ILGA) annual report on l...
Egyptians who do not fit into the mold of the ideal, heteronormative citizen as perpetuated by the s...
Fifteen years ago, there was little space within international development policy circles within whi...
This paper discusses cultural translations of international campaigns against Female Genital Cutting...
Mohamed Choukri’s biographical novel, Le Pain Nu, discusses his early life in the northern Moroccan ...
Fifteen years ago, there was little space within international development policy circles within whi...