Women and Radicalization
Author: M Badran
Date: 2006
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20 pages
(60 KB)
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How have feminist ideas and, by contrast, extremist views gained popularity among Muslim women? Can development assistance encourage feminist empowerment and dissuade women from involvement in extremism? This paper from the Danish Institute for International Studies analyses the flow of feminist and extremist ideas into Muslim countries and communities, and examines women's roles in extremist groups. It argues that feminist reinterpretations of the Qur'an and development interventions targeted at enhancing women's educational and social standing could offer empowering alternatives to extremism.
Increased internet use and fresh reinterpretation of the Qur'an on gender issues have expanded transnational, regional and local networks of Islamic feminists, whose gender-progressive approach is based on religious texts. There is increased ownership of feminist discourse by Muslim women, but their resistance to patriarchal practices may provoke a backlash from conservatives and extremists.
Radicalisation, the support for extremist ideologies and participation in violent actions, can emerge in contexts of despair, outrage against injustice and perceived lack of alternatives to effect change. The spread of patriarchal extremism among Muslims has also intensified recently: women are brought into contact with these discourses at the country, the local or domestic level. Various findings are made about the spread of radicalisation among women:
Development programmes aimed at diverting women from extremism and towards self-empowerment should broaden their social opportunities and educate them on their rights, while remaining sensitive to local conditions:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Badran, M., 2006, 'Women and Radicalization ', DIIS Report 2006, no. 5, Danish Institute for International Studies, Copenhagen
Author:
Margot Badran
, m-badran@northwestern.edu