Affiliation:
1. Department of Sociology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
Abstract
Abstract
Following the 2010–2011 revolution, Islamist and secularist political parties and women’s rights organizations formed coalitions in Tunisia. Nothing of the sort had happened before in Tunisian history. This article considers the conditions that led feminists with different ideological beliefs to create what I call an “unlikely feminist coalition” in Tunisia. I argue that Islamists and secularists can form unlikely feminist coalitions when facing similar threats, working on similar tasks prior to formation of the coalition, the experience of common grievances, and a shared feminist identity. Drawing on the gender politics and social movement literature on coalitions, I suggest that more needs to be understood about unlikely feminist coalitions, especially in the Middle East.
Funder
American Association of University Women
American Political Science Association
Middle East and North Africa (MENA) Politics Section
Eisenhower Institute
Gettysburg College
United States Institute of Peace
Peace Scholar Award
University of Notre Dame
Global Religion Research Initiative
University of Texas at Austin
The Department of Sociology
The Robert Strauss Center
The Women’s and Gender Studies Department
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Gender Studies
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2 articles.
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