Women as Equal Citizens: Advocating for Change in Muslim-Majority Societies

In collaboration with the Dialogue Project at Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies

Event Details

  • Time

    12:00pm

  • Date

    06 Sep, 2006

  • Location

    • Kenney Auditorium, Johns Hopkins University
    • 1740 Massachusetts Ave NW Washington, DC
  • Contact

    WLP

Lina Abou-Habib

Executive Director of the Collective for Research and Training on Development–
Action

Mahnaz Afkhami

Founder and President of Women’s Learning Partnership, Executive
Director of the Foundation for Iranian Studies and former Minister of State for Women’s Affairs in Iran

Amina Lemrini

Executive Committee member of Association Démocratique des Femmes du Maroc and a Board member of Collectif 95 Maghreb-Egalite

Azar Nafisi

Author of the best seller Reading Lolita in Tehran, is a visiting scholar at the SAIS Foreign Policy Institute and Director of the SAIS Dialogue Project at Johns Hopkins University

Across the Middle East region, women are using grassroots-based, bottom-up, culture-specific methods to reform policies and legislation to ensure gender equality and social justice. Women's right to equal citizenship is guaranteed by the majority of constitutions in Arab countries, as well as by international law. In many countries in the region, however, women are denied their right to nationality–a crucial component of citizenship. Women in the region who marry men of other nationalities cannot confer their nationality on their husbands or children.

These laws undermine women’s status as equal citizens in their home countries, preventing them from participating fully in public life. On September 6th, Women’s Learning Partnership will convene a panel discussion and launch an international campaign in support of a seven-country regional campaign for Arab
women’s right to nationality in Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, and Syria.

2006 Women as Equal Citizens
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