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Double Trouble: Analyzing the Impact of Statelessness on the Status of Kurdish Women
Author(s) -
Maya Garfinkel
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
flux international relations review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2562-6094
DOI - 10.26443/firr.v11i2.71
Subject(s) - statelessness , oppression , stateless protocol , empowerment , gender studies , politics , nationalism , political science , ideology , sociology , political economy , citizenship , law , computer network , network packet , computer science
The struggle of Kurdish women at large has been, as many media outlets suggested, an extraordinary and unique example of women’s status in the Middle East. In contrast to the widespread, surface-level narrative of Kurdish women’s empowerment, a complex political, socio-historical background of Kurdish statelessness has intensified women’s empowerment or oppression. This essay will demonstrate how nationalist ideology, autonomous spaces, and violent conflict may provide the conditions for a 'double revolution' and/or 'double oppression' of stateless Kurdish women through the lens of statelessness. These three features of statelessness intersect with unique features of the stateless Kurdish populations across the Middle East to determine a woman’s status. More specifically, the case of Syrian Kurdistan exemplifies a 'double revolution' while Iraqi Kurdistan exemplifies a case of 'double oppression' for Kurdish women.

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