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Transnational activism in Lebanon's women's movement. (c2013)

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dc.contributor.author Hage, Sandy S. El
dc.date.accessioned 2013-09-04T07:07:37Z
dc.date.available 2013-09-04T07:07:37Z
dc.date.copyright 2013 en_US
dc.date.issued 2013-09-04
dc.date.submitted 2013-06-03
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10725/1551
dc.description Includes bibliographical references (leaves 117-124). en_US
dc.description.abstract This thesis investigates transnational campaigns from the international and state level to consider the existence of transnational activism in Lebanon’s women’s movement. Lebanon’s women’s movement serves as an example to analyze the effects of transnationalism on national campaigns for policy change, in the Lebanese case, reformed personal status laws and citizenship rights. The study follows the literature on Lebanon’s women’s movement to extend an analysis of systemic effects on the structure of women’s organizing with emphasis on international partnerships in state-centered contention during the country’s post-war development. Pressure for greater recognition and observance of women’s human rights has risen as a pertinent feature of civil society as Lebanon has become further enmeshed in international partnerships and U.N. agencies. As a result, the structure of the women’s movement has transformed from a loose network of women’s advocacy groups to a centralized, top-down movement. The focus of this case study investigates the spur of a bottom-up, grassroots feminist movement as a response to top-down contention and cooptation of women’s organizing by a UN-Lebanon alliance through the UNFPA and National Commission for Lebanese Women. With focus on grassroots organizing and diffusion of feminist discourse, the case study of Nasawiya provides a contrast between transnational activism in women’s organizing across ideology and structure. Still, Lebanon’s women’s movements reveal old truths of the country’s sectarian political system: women’s organizing continues to suffer at the hands of patriarchal politics. Nonetheless, the emergence of a grassroots, feminist polity suggests that, as the “mainstream” women’s movement has become less fragmented and institutionalized, the “alternative” feminist movement has also increased in activism and visibility, thus implying a new schism in Lebanon’s women’s movement. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Feminism -- Lebanon en_US
dc.subject Feminism -- International cooperation en_US
dc.subject Nasawiya (Lebanon) en_US
dc.subject Transnationalism en_US
dc.subject Women's rights -- Lebanon en_US
dc.subject Women -- Social networks -- Lebanbon en_US
dc.subject Dissertations, Academic en_US
dc.subject Lebanese American University -- Dissertations en_US
dc.title Transnational activism in Lebanon's women's movement. (c2013) en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US
dc.title.subtitle Between fitna, fawda, and feminism. en_US
dc.term.submitted Spring en_US
dc.author.degree MA in International Affairs en_US
dc.author.school Arts and Sciences en_US
dc.author.idnumber 20090430I en_US
dc.author.commembers Dr. Marwan Rowayheb
dc.author.commembers Dr. Dima Dabbous-Sensenig
dc.author.woa OA en_US
dc.description.physdesc 1 bound copy: ix, 124 leaves; 30 cm. Available at RNL. en_US
dc.author.division International Affairs en_US
dc.author.advisor Dr. Jennifer Skulte-Ouaiss
dc.keywords Women’s Movement en_US
dc.keywords Transnational Activism en_US
dc.keywords Transnational Feminism en_US
dc.keywords Grassroots Organizing en_US
dc.keywords Feminist International Relations Theory en_US
dc.identifier.doi https://doi.org/10.26756/th.2013.16 en_US
dc.publisher.institution Lebanese American University en_US


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