Essay Question: Describe the different freedoms and limitations women experience in the Middle East.

Similar documents
May 12, The Honorable Barack Obama President of the United States The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW Washington DC 20500

Refugees in Jordan and Lebanon: Life on the Margins

WILLOW & JADEN SMITH IN DUBAI (DUBAI SUMMER SURPRISES) SOCIAL MEDIA COMPETITON

United Arab Emirates. By: Caleb Wooden & Rashane Peart 3rd period

In the name of Allah, the Most Merciful, the Most Gracious

OUR BEST DAYS ARE AHEAD OF US

THE ROLE OF UNIVERSITIES IN SHAPING THE YOUNG ARAB WORLD. Christopher Vas Griffith University

United Arab Emirates

UPR Submission Kuwait

Reigate Model United Nations. My First Conference

PODCAST: Politically Powerless, Economically Powerful: A Contradiction?: A Conversation with the Saudi Businesswoman Rasha Hifzi

HAUT-COMMISSARIAT AUX DROITS DE L HOMME OFFICE OF THE HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS PALAIS DES NATIONS 1211 GENEVA 10, SWITZERLAND

United Arab Emirates

Country Profile: Saudi Arabia

General Assembly Third. Social, Humanitarian, and Cultural Committee

Political and Social Transition in Egypt. Magued Osman

Report Transformations in UAE's Foreign Policy Kristian Coates Ulrichsen* 8 June 2017

ARAB BAROMETER SURVEY PROJECT JORDAN REPORT

UPR Submission Saudi Arabia March 2013

Women s Rights are human rights

KUWAITI PUBLIC OPINION SURVEY REPORT. Prepared by. Kuwait Economic Society

26 August 2010 A Middle East Point of View

Middle East. Middle East Arabic and/or Islamic

National Quali cations

PowerPoint accompaniment for Carolina K-12 s lesson Tunisia & the Arab Spring

PRESENTATION ABOUT: BAHRAIN, ISA CULTURAL CENTRE & THE INTERN.

Hashmat Suddat s Struggle UNHCR When they handed out the envelope with our acceptance, when they said the word "refugee," tears came to my eyes.

QATAR. Issuing Authorities

Breaking News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

The Middle East Consumer Confidence Index Survey. June 2010

Slowly, more Saudi women find their way into the workplace

GCC Summit: Reviewing Policies, Addressing Challenges

Security Council. United Nations S/2015/217

Human Rights Watch Submission to the CEDAW Committee of Oman s Periodic Report for the 68th Session. October 2017

Jordan. Freedom of Expression JANUARY 2012

PAMUN XV UNESCO QUESTION OF DEFINING LIMITATIONS TO THE FREEDOM OF PRESS

ABU DHABI (UAE) Page 1 of 6

Samir Rudwan Abu- Rumman

Dr. Abdalla Mosa Altayer PROFILE

How Middle East Tourists View Malaysia as a Tourist Destination 1 BY Mohamed Safar Hasim & Ahmad Azmi M.Ariffin 2

Middle East & North Africa Facebook Demographics

Lebanon: Five Years after the Arab Uprisings

Bayt.com Middle East Consumer Confidence Index. May 2012

National Quali cations

Ease of doing business in the Gulf countries

Bayt.com Middle East Consumer Confidence Index. March 2015

The end of a protest + Flirting(छ ड ख न ) with chauvinism(क मपरस त ) Everybody loves a good protest - Chennai s Marina beach Vs Delhi Ramlila Ground

United Arab Emirates Submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review

Ernst&Young, celebrating 80 years in Bahrain

Contents: amnesty international

CHAPTER II LABOUR FORCE

Bayt.com Middle East Consumer Confidence Index. November 2012

March 7, Second Annual ASDA A Burson-Marsteller Arab Youth Survey

UN Human Rights Council: Ten Years On

Investigating the Geology and Geography of Oil

hereinafter referred to collectively as ''the Parties," and individually as "a Party":

UPR Submission Tunisia November 2011

The Bayt.com Middle East Jobseeker Confidence Survey. August 2017

Bayt.com Middle East Consumer Confidence Index. March 2013

Country Profile: United Arab Emirates

Dr. Fatima Saeed Al Shamsi

Regional prospects: Western Asia Project LINK Meeting Yasuhisa Yamamoto October 20, 2016

1 September 2009 Public. Amnesty International. Qatar. Submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review

Dr Neil Partrick East Sussex United Kingdom

SAF Essay #29 June 10, 2004 THE ATTACK IN ALKHOBAR, SAUDI ARABIA: REFLECTIONS ON "TOLERANCE" By John Duke Anthony

Bedouin Rising: How Saudi Female Entrepreneurs are Leading Saudi Arabia into a Knowledge-Based Economy

Developing intellectual property regimes in the Gulf BY NADIA NAIM

A 21 ST CENTURY TOURISTIC PERSPECTIVE ON UNITED ARAB EMIRATES, QATAR AND SULTANATE OF OMAN

Human Rights Watch Submission to the CEDAW Committee of Kuwait s Periodic Report for the 68th Session. October 2017

Sage software firm hit by data breach

Samir Rudwan Abu- Rumman

Ahmad Sulaiman Bin-Obaid

The Bayt.com Entrepreneurship in MENA Survey. Nov 2017

MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT: THE KERALA EXPERIENCE. S Irudaya Rajan K C Zachariah

The new role of women in the new Saudi Arabian economy. Martin Hvidt

Contents. . Index 1. . Glossary Policy Statement Who is covered by the Policy? The scope of the Policy 3

Saudi Women s Education and Work Opportunities: Equity Matters

The Bayt.com Middle East Job Seeker Confidence Survey. September 2018

Political snakes and ladders. If you decide to cast your vote in person where do you go?

Elections in Iraq September 21 Iraqi Kurdistan Region Parliamentary Elections

Social Studies 11 First Assignment: Welcome!

Summary of key concerns regarding human rights defenders in Saudi Arabia

The Middle East Jobs Index Survey. January 2010

Home > Educational Resources > For Educators > Felon Disenfranchisement Is Constitutional, And Justified

A Guide to Living and Working as a Lawyer in the Middle East

Cultural Capital of Second Generation Migrant Women in the UK: Reconstructing gendered experiences through biographical interviews

GRADE 9 Social Studies Canada: Opportunities and Challenges

explore Parliament Role Playing a Parliamentary debate a guide for teachers House is your house

WORLD HOSPITALITY AWARDS 2017

Social Stratification: Sex and Gender Part III

Survey of Iraqi. International Republican Institute. December 26, 2004 January 7, 2005

Provisional agenda. Supplementary Item for Inclusion in the Provisional Agenda

Middle East that began in the winter of 2010 and continue today. Disturbances have ranged

Bayt.com Middle East Consumer Confidence Index. September 2015

Women Labor Force Participation in the GCC

WOMEN, BUSINESS AND THE LAW Paula Tavares April 25, 2018

Dangers of Using Aggregated Data for Understanding Socio-Demographic Realities of the Gulf Region

BAHRAIN OMAN KUWAIT UNITED ARAB EMIRATES SAUDI ARABIA QATAR. Abu Dhabi Matrah. Ad Dawnah. Manama. Al Kuwayt. Riyadh. AMY Map by Boyet Rivera III

UK attitudes toward the Arab world an Arab News/YouGov poll

Qatar diplomatic crisis what you need to know

Transcription:

Name: : Middle East Women DBQ Directions: 1. Read the essay question. 2. Then, read and analyze the following documents using the guided questions, keeping in mind the essay question. 3. Categorize the documents into Graphic Organizer #1, and create a thesis statement. 4. Finally, answer the essay question in a typed four or five paragraph essay using a minimum of 6 documents. (There should be 3 documents per body paragraph in a 4 paragraph essay and 2 documents per body paragraph in a 5 paragraph essay). Essay Question: Describe the different freedoms and limitations women experience in the Middle East. Document #1 Document 1 Think about point-of-view. How does the author or people in Source: Muslim Woman at Computer." Image. http://www.istockphoto.com. World History: The Modern Era. ABC-CLIO, 2012. Web. 20 Sept. 2012. Caption: Fully covered Muslim woman works at a computer in Oman. The worldwide focus on the Middle East in recent Document years, has spurred 2 the women's rights movement in the region. Omani women gained the right to vote and the right to hold office in 1997. Document 2 Source: Saudi Arabia: Advisory Council Urges Vote for Women. New York Times 7 June 2011: A8. Global Issues in Context. Web. 20 Sept. 2012. The advisory Shura Council said Monday that women should be allowed to vote and run as candidates in future [community] elections. Saudi authorities announced in March that half the seats in municipal councils would be elected in the future, but they ruled out female candidates or voters. The council said the government ''should take the necessary measures to include female voters in municipal elections, in accordance with Islamic Sharia.'' A council spokesman said the recommendation ''has nothing to do with the current elections but is rather a recommendation for future elections. Document 2 Think about point-of-view. How does the author or people in

Document 3 Source: Heather Sharp, Dubai Women Storm World of Work, BBC News, 2 Aug. 2005. With the job opportunities of a booming economy, a government drive to empower and educate women and exposure to other cultures, Dubai's [located in the UAE] women are moving in increasing numbers into a wide range of professions. The newspapers proudly tout the achievements of women firefighters, police officers, [and] business leaders. Among UAE nationals it is generally considered inappropriate for women to speak to men they are neither married nor related to in public. All government universities are single-sex. But contact with male work colleagues is increasingly seen as acceptable. Amna Mazam, a UAE national, is a student counselor at Dubai Women's College. She says 50-60% of their 2,300 students are likely to continue into employment. The majority of the others do not work because of pressure from their parents or husbands, she says, although some choose to stay at home to raise children full time. However, among Dubai students I meet a stream of highly ambitious, determined young women with supportive families. Several, like business marketing student Maria Hanif Qassimi, 20, say they would refuse to marry a man who would not allow them to work. "I've worked very hard to have a career, and I don't want to just blow it off," she said. Few, like IT graduate Salama, would accept a future husband's demands to stay at home: "It's our religion - what he says, I must do," she says. Others like Bushra Mohammed Roken, 19, the leader of the student council at Zayed University, would work around such views If he doesn't want me to go out, it's not like I'm in prison, because I could set up my own business from home..." Document 4 Source: Embassy of the United Arab Emirates, Women in the UAE, UAE Embassy, 18 April 2013. The Constitution of the UAE guarantees equal rights for both men and women. Under the Constitution, women enjoy the same legal status, claim to titles, access to education and the right to practice professions as men. They are also guaranteed the same access to employment, health and family welfare facilities. The rights of women to inherit property are also guaranteed and ensured. Document 3 _ Document 4

Document 5 Source: Mohammed Jamjoom and Laura Smith-Spark, Saudi Arabia Women Defy Authorities over Female Driving Ban, CNN, 26 October 2013. In an extraordinary display of civil disobedience, women in Saudi Arabia on Saturday defied their nation's ban on women driving by getting behind the steering wheel. After a campaign for change gathered pace on social media, numerous women filmed themselves behind the wheel Saturday in various cities and uploaded those videos to YouTube. Several Saudi supporters of the October 26th Women's Driving Campaign told CNN that at least 25 women drove Saturday. Authorities stopped five women who were spotted driving in the Saudi capital and "each case was dealt with accordingly," Col. Fawaz Al-Meeman of Riyadh police told CNN. Al-Meeman, an assistant spokesman for that city's police department, explained that the women weren't taken to police stations. Instead, they were kept in their vehicles until their male guardians arrived, at which point the women were released after signing pledges not to drive again Document 5 Document #6 Source Citation: The Global Gender Gap Report, World Economic Forum, 2011. Kuwait s Gender Gap Index Scores Document 6

Document 7 Source: United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Institute for Statistics, "Literacy Statistics" (www.uis.unesco.org, accessed March 11, 2003). Literacy Rates Among Young Women in Selected Countries, 1970-2000 Document 7 Document 8 Document 8 Source: Katy Watson, Dubai Dress Code: Cover up, UAE Women Tell Foreigners, BBC News, 5 July 2012. Fed up with what's seen as a lack of respect for the local culture, two young Emirati women started a twitter campaign called #UAEDressCode, urging foreigners to cover up in public places. And hundreds of people have weighed in - with one tweet suggesting setting up a police department where you could complain about inappropriate clothing. "An extra few inches of cloth won't kill you," said another. Twentythree-year-old Asma started the campaign with a friend. Greeting me, and wearing a low-cut tunic and leggings in the privacy of her own home, she told me why she got involved. "The way some people dress here is offensive to our beliefs," she told me. "Malls are public places and there are families and children." A sundress, she says, is good for a beach, but not for shopping. All the malls here have notices at the entrances asking shoppers to cover their shoulders and knees but Asma says that is not enough. She wants a law to be introduced to ensure the dress code is adhered to

Document 9 Source: Leaders Hail Kuwait Women s Votes. BBC News, 17 May 2005. The United States and the United Nations have both welcomed Kuwait's decision to give full political rights to women as an important advance The result, announced by the speaker of parliament, was greeted with thunderous applause from the public gallery where backers of the amendment were gathered. Outside, drivers hooted their horns, people danced and cheered and lit fireworks. "We made it. This is history," said suffrage activist Roula Dashti."Our target is the parliamentary polls in 2007. I'm starting my campaign from today." Islamist MPs [Members of Parliament], who foiled past suffrage moves, added a clause on Monday saying women must abide by Islamic law when voting and campaigning Some Islamists accused the government of pressurizing MPs to pass the amendment to the electoral law, saying the change goes against religious teaching and serves US interests. Kuwait becomes the fourth Gulf country where women as well as men can vote in elections after Bahrain, Oman and Qatar. Saudi Arabia holds strictly limited, male-only elections. "Thank God we finished with this issue," Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah al-ahmad al-sabah said. "I want our womenfolk to help us build our beloved country and our future." Document 10 Source: Viewpoint: Saudi Women Should Not Drive, BBC News, 3 October 2011. The vast majority of women do not drive in [Saudi Arabia] and there remains much opposition to female drivers. A 25-year-old Saudi man, Nawwaf, told BBC Radio 4's World at One program why he does not want to see women driving in Saudi Arabia. "I think women driving is the key to a lot of things. In Western countries, 100 years ago women's clothes were different but now you can see they are a little bit naked. "If you start now to let women drive, let them go wherever they want, let them do whatever they want, we will be in the same position some day. Then Saudi Arabia will be like New York. "It's not good for some girl to show her body, wear very short skirts. This is not about Saudi Arabia, it's about Islam. We've got a generation who were raised watching Gossip Girls and other [similar] series. They only want to be like that, dress like that, drive like that. It's not about need. "Now it's driving [women want]. After five years it will be taking off the abaya [all-covering veil and gown], after 10 years they will ask to be allowed to wear short skirts. This is how it's going, that is how I feel Document 9 Document 10