Women’s Rights in Iraq
Read up, everybody. Here are a few links to interviews with, reviews of, and posts by Nadje al-Ali. She is the director of Gender Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at the University of London and author of What Kind of Liberation? Women and the Occupation of Iraq. In her new book, Dr. al-Ali shows “how the US invasion has set Iraqi women’s rights back as much as 70 years”-as explained in an excellent Guardian review by Sara Wajid.
In a 2007 interview with Mother Jones, al-Ali explains, “Women have been the biggest losers of the post-invasion period. I worked on the modern history of Iraqi women, and of course there were horrible problems related to living under a dictatorship, living with wars, living with sanctions. But one of the most tragic things is that really, women have been pushed back and have lost out quite a bit.” The interview gives details about shifts backwards in the post-invasion safety, cultural practices, and even the constitutional status of women.
At AlterNet in March 2008, Dr. al-Ali posted on The Iraq Legacy: Millions of Women’s Lives Destroyed, pointing out the political irony (to put it lightly) of this so-called liberation:
“On International Women’s Day in 2004, nearly a year after the invasion of Iraq, George Bush, the US President, addressed250 women from around the world who had gathered at the White House. ‘The advance of women’s rights and the advance of liberty are ultimately inseparable,’ he said.”
But she explains that this is “stirring stuff, but totally empty claims. In fact, Iraq’s women have become the biggest losers in the post-invasion disaster.”
Last 5 posts by Virginia Rutter
- NICE WORK: Lean in too much? See new study on gender and overwork - April 22nd, 2013
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- NICE WORK: The sexual mystique stuck inside our heads - February 20th, 2013




April 22nd, 2013 at 2:15 pm
I say this because this was the only cab company that picked up
the phone on the first ring. As we ate, not only did our waitress check back
with us to see if we required anything further, but the manager
stopped by as well. Be comfortable in its open-air concept restaurant, where you might even sit in a table and look up
to see stars in a clear night sky.