This article explores how working women in Sudan's capital negotiate legal constraints placing them under the guardianship of their husbands, imposing strict public dress and behavioral codes upon them, and upholding occupational segregation in the workplace. Upper- and middle-class women of different political-ideological standpoint see constraints as well as advantages with the Islamist approach to women's economic empowerment. While the restrictive legal framework enables Sudanese working women to make independent economic choices, the economic resources gained through wage work have had limited transformative potential in relation to the larger structures constraining various aspects of women's lives. The article is part of a special is...
This research explored whether the MENA region countries have adopted sufficient legal provisions th...
This article examines the impact of socio-legal inequality on the work conditions of female domestic...
The ‘Arab Spring’ is a nuanced phenomenon of significance to African democracy and women’s rights in...
This article explores women's substantive representation in Sudan's National Assembly. It examines t...
Domestic work is defined by the International Labour Organization (ILO) as: ‘work performed in or fo...
This article explores the possibilities, limits, and paradox of Salafi female agency at a time when...
The article explores the variety of normative and legal resources that Sudanese women inside and out...
In classical political thought, citizenship is a gender-neutral abstract personhood. This concept do...
The international discourse on gender and peacebuilding presupposes a common agenda among all women ...
In 2011 the state of South Sudan gained its independence from Sudan and thus became the world’s youn...
Introduction: This study presents an original contribution by examining an often-neglected country i...
The fundamental argument put forward by Islamists, who have ruled Sudan since 1989, for not signing ...
The article sets out to examine the changing role of women vis-ร -vis inter-communal conflicts...
This study focuses on the experiences of a group of women made redundant from public sector institut...
Observers have frequently commented on the high degree of sexual differentiation that prevails in Is...
This research explored whether the MENA region countries have adopted sufficient legal provisions th...
This article examines the impact of socio-legal inequality on the work conditions of female domestic...
The ‘Arab Spring’ is a nuanced phenomenon of significance to African democracy and women’s rights in...
This article explores women's substantive representation in Sudan's National Assembly. It examines t...
Domestic work is defined by the International Labour Organization (ILO) as: ‘work performed in or fo...
This article explores the possibilities, limits, and paradox of Salafi female agency at a time when...
The article explores the variety of normative and legal resources that Sudanese women inside and out...
In classical political thought, citizenship is a gender-neutral abstract personhood. This concept do...
The international discourse on gender and peacebuilding presupposes a common agenda among all women ...
In 2011 the state of South Sudan gained its independence from Sudan and thus became the world’s youn...
Introduction: This study presents an original contribution by examining an often-neglected country i...
The fundamental argument put forward by Islamists, who have ruled Sudan since 1989, for not signing ...
The article sets out to examine the changing role of women vis-ร -vis inter-communal conflicts...
This study focuses on the experiences of a group of women made redundant from public sector institut...
Observers have frequently commented on the high degree of sexual differentiation that prevails in Is...
This research explored whether the MENA region countries have adopted sufficient legal provisions th...
This article examines the impact of socio-legal inequality on the work conditions of female domestic...
The ‘Arab Spring’ is a nuanced phenomenon of significance to African democracy and women’s rights in...