Author : Vania Carvalho Pinto
Publisher : Garnet Publishing Ltd
ISBN 13 : 0863724345
Total Pages : 185 pages
Book Rating : 4.8/5 (637 download)
Book Synopsis Nation-Building, State and the Genderframing of Women's Rights in the United Arab Emirates (1971-2009) by : Vania Carvalho Pinto
Download or read book Nation-Building, State and the Genderframing of Women's Rights in the United Arab Emirates (1971-2009) written by Vania Carvalho Pinto and published by Garnet Publishing Ltd. This book was released on 2022-07-01 with total page 185 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In the United Arab Emirates, the extensive change to Emirati women's traditional rights and roles has been one of the most visible transformations taking place throughout the country's 40 years of modern history. This book offers an interpretation of why and how these modifications came about. The book discovers that there is no direct or easy link between the State's 'offer of rights' towards women and society's acceptance of them. Given these circumstances, the mechanisms that induce women to actually take advantage of what is offered have not been given sufficient attention. The concept of 'genderframing' aims precisely at defining the 'connecting mechanism' and explaining the successes and failures of these policies, both mobilization-wise and implementation-wise. The term 'genderframing' refers to a dynamic and interactive process between the State and its population, which entails the symbolic rework of meanings associated with women-related policies. It is argued that such re-interpretation has been purposefully conducted by the Emirati State in order to portray the changing roles of women as necessary and desirable, for reasons associated with nation-building purposes, religious conformity, promotion of family values, and efforts at indigenous cultural preservation. The book highlights the profound intertwining of gender, nation-building, and domestic socio-political dynamics in a country that, while seeking to establish its modernizing credentials, is still struggling for self-definition and empowerment.