Authoritarianism and Kurdish Alternative Politics: Governmentality, Gender and Justice
Latif Tas
Published:
2021
Online ISBN:
9781399513586
Print ISBN:
9781474457415
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Authoritarianism and Kurdish Alternative Politics: Governmentality, Gender and Justice
Latif Tas
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Latif Tas
Pages
168–216
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Published:
December 2021
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Tas, Latif, 'Gender, Politics and Alternative Governmentality', Authoritarianism and Kurdish Alternative Politics: Governmentality, Gender and Justice (
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Abstract
Chapter four focuses on the politics of gender. This chapter starts with the account of the Yezidi Kurdish women’s tragedy in 2014 at the hands of ISIS religious authoritarianism, when the rest of the world ‘discovered’ the role and power of the Kurdish women’s movement in the Middle East. The chapter explains the links between official rhetoric regarding the role of women in the post-ISIS Middle East and measures implemented to increase women’s participation in political processes. It highlights the failure or challenges of these measures in effectively addressing the situation of Kurdish women both within Turkey and Syria and in diasporic contexts. The chapter provides a localised and gendered analysis of political transformation and an assessment – beyond mere numbers – of the degree to which women have been able to participate in new Kurdish political, economic, social and legal structures. After analysing the development of the Kurdish women’s movement, the chapter continues to analyse what kind of new gender codes and relationships have been introduced by the Kurdish movement. The chapter moves onto the direct account of the day the author spent observing the election of members of the Kurdish women’s court in Berlin 2017, and discusses the politics of jineoloji (‘women’s science’) from that account.
Keywords: Yezidi Kurds, ISIS, Kurdish women’s movement, women’s court, Turkey, Syria, religious authoritarianism, diaspora
Subject
Middle Eastern Studies
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