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Organized Muslim Women in Turkey = An Intersectional Approach to Building Women’s Coalitions /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Organized Muslim Women in Turkey/ by Ayşe Dursun.
Reminder of title:
An Intersectional Approach to Building Women’s Coalitions /
Author:
Dursun, Ayşe.
Description:
XI, 236 p.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Political Sociology. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-09308-1
ISBN:
9783031093081
Organized Muslim Women in Turkey = An Intersectional Approach to Building Women’s Coalitions /
Dursun, Ayşe.
Organized Muslim Women in Turkey
An Intersectional Approach to Building Women’s Coalitions /[electronic resource] :by Ayşe Dursun. - 1st ed. 2022. - XI, 236 p.online resource. - Citizenship, Gender and Diversity,2947-809X. - Citizenship, Gender and Diversity,.
1. Introduction -- 2. Gender Relations and Women’s Movements in Turkey -- 3. Patriarchy, Women’s Movements, and Coalitions: An Intersectional Framework -- 4. Intersectional Experiences with Structural Inequality and Privilege -- 5. Political Organization and Mobilization -- 6. Organized Muslim Women in Coalitions: Possibilities and Obstacles -- 7. Difficult but Necessary: Outlook for Women’s Coalitions (Research).
This book explores the politics of organized Muslim women in Turkey and analyzes their coalitions with other—secular feminist, Kurdish, etc.—women’s movements from an intersectional perspective. It provides empirical evidence for significant changes in Muslim women’s politics under the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and points to the increasing difficulty to build cross-movement women’s coalitions in the face of rising religious conservatism and authoritarianism under the AKP rule. While feminist Muslim women who display an intersectional understanding of structural inequality and oppression are found to be more resilient in the face of political pressure, conservative Muslim women dodge women’s coalitions and align with the government’s discourses and policies. Empirical evidence based on interviews with organized Muslim women also shows that prospects for coalition building largely depends on the specific societal and institutional (re-)configurations of patriarchy along with other relations of domination rather than mere ideological “difference” among women. This book will be of interest to scholars and students across Gender Studies, Sociology, and Political Science, particularly those whose research focuses on intersectionality and social movements. Ayşe Dursun is a Post-Doctoral Researcher in the Department of Political Science at the University of Vienna, Austria. She does research on gender and politics, intersectionality, gender equality policies, social reproduction and care, social and women’s movements, and migration. She has published in a number of peer-reviewed journals including German Politics and Society, Historical Social Research, and Journal of Gender Studies. Ayşe Dursun is currently a steering committee member of the European Consortium for Political Research’s (ECPR) standing group on Gender and Politics.
ISBN: 9783031093081
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-031-09308-1doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
1107317
Political Sociology.
LC Class. No.: HQ12-449
Dewey Class. No.: 305.3
Organized Muslim Women in Turkey = An Intersectional Approach to Building Women’s Coalitions /
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1. Introduction -- 2. Gender Relations and Women’s Movements in Turkey -- 3. Patriarchy, Women’s Movements, and Coalitions: An Intersectional Framework -- 4. Intersectional Experiences with Structural Inequality and Privilege -- 5. Political Organization and Mobilization -- 6. Organized Muslim Women in Coalitions: Possibilities and Obstacles -- 7. Difficult but Necessary: Outlook for Women’s Coalitions (Research).
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This book explores the politics of organized Muslim women in Turkey and analyzes their coalitions with other—secular feminist, Kurdish, etc.—women’s movements from an intersectional perspective. It provides empirical evidence for significant changes in Muslim women’s politics under the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and points to the increasing difficulty to build cross-movement women’s coalitions in the face of rising religious conservatism and authoritarianism under the AKP rule. While feminist Muslim women who display an intersectional understanding of structural inequality and oppression are found to be more resilient in the face of political pressure, conservative Muslim women dodge women’s coalitions and align with the government’s discourses and policies. Empirical evidence based on interviews with organized Muslim women also shows that prospects for coalition building largely depends on the specific societal and institutional (re-)configurations of patriarchy along with other relations of domination rather than mere ideological “difference” among women. This book will be of interest to scholars and students across Gender Studies, Sociology, and Political Science, particularly those whose research focuses on intersectionality and social movements. Ayşe Dursun is a Post-Doctoral Researcher in the Department of Political Science at the University of Vienna, Austria. She does research on gender and politics, intersectionality, gender equality policies, social reproduction and care, social and women’s movements, and migration. She has published in a number of peer-reviewed journals including German Politics and Society, Historical Social Research, and Journal of Gender Studies. Ayşe Dursun is currently a steering committee member of the European Consortium for Political Research’s (ECPR) standing group on Gender and Politics.
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