LDR   05672nam^^22009733a^4500
001        CVU0000074_00001
005        20200703073244.0
006        m^^^^^o^^d^^^^^^^^
007        cr^^n^---ma^mp
008        200703n^^^^^^^^xx^||||^o^^^^^|||^u^ara^d
040        |a UkLSOA |c UkLSOA
245 00 |a Interview with Fahima Charafeddine |h [electronic resource] |y English.
246 3    |a مقابلة مع فهيمة شرف الدين |y Arabic.
260        |c 2013.
490        |a Middle East Women's Activism.
500        |a Funding : Women's Activism in the Arab World (2013-2016). This project, funded by a British Academy Mid-Career Fellowship, examines the significance of middle-class women's activism to the geo/politics of Arab countries, from national independence until the Arab uprisings. It was based on over 100 personal narratives of women activists of different generations from Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon.
500        |a Fāṭimah Sharaf al-Dīn is also transliterated as Fahima Charafeddin
500        |a Interview conducted on: 31 October 2013
500        |a Duration: 1 hour and 15 minutes
500        |a Language of interview: Arabic
500        |a Audio transcription and translation by Captivate Arabia, Amman, Jordan, info@captivatearabia.com
500        |a آسيا -- لبنان -- بيروت -- بيروت
500        |a VIAF (name authority) : Pratt, Nicola Christine : URI http://viaf.org/viaf/49147457
500        |a VIAF (name authority) : Sharaf al-Dīn, Fāṭimah : URI http://viaf.org/viaf/71690630
506        |a © 2013 the Interviewer and Interviewee. All rights reserved. Used here with permission.
520 3    |a Fahima Charafeddin was born to a wealthy family in south Lebanon during the late 1940s and completed her undergraduate education in Beirut and in South Lebanon at the Lebanese University, majoring in philosophy. She worked as a primary school teacher for 10 years before working as an educational advisor. She completed her PhD in Paris, studying culture and ideologies in the Arab World, and subsequently became a researcher and then was promoted to Director of the Arab Development Institute, working at the Institute for 11 years and acting as Editor-in-Chief of "Arab Thought", a journal published by the Institute. She taught at the Lebanese University for many years, and published numerous articles and books on the women's movement in Lebanon, studies about women in armed conflict, inter-sect marriages and how they affect Lebanese women, and displacement of women during Lebanese conflicts. Fahima fled south Lebanon with her children during the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, and in 1988 moved to Tripoli with her family. She was involved in the cultural movement in Lebanon before and during the war, as a member of the Cultural Council of South Lebanon. She did not become involved with women's organizations and issues until she saw the suffering and displacement of women during the conflict. She was the founder and, at the time of the interview, president of the Committee for the Follow-up on Women’s Issues, formed in 1996 as a women's NGO dealing with Lebanese women's legal, economic, political, and social issues in order to empower them as well as working on education and generating data about women. She is concerned with the Personal Status Laws in Lebanon that leave law in the hands of powerful religious sects that do not give women human rights within marriage and divorce. Fahima advocates for equality, calling for systematic cultural change.
533        |a Electronic reproduction. |b London : |c SOAS University of London, |c University of Warwick, |d 2020. |f (SOAS Digital Collections) |n Mode of access: World Wide Web. |n System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software.
650    7 |a Arab Socialism. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a الاشتراكية العربية. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Lebanon. Personal Status Laws. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a لبنان. قوانين الأحوال الشخصية. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Social justice.
650    0 |a Colonization.
650    7 |a Algerian Revolution. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Algeria -- History -- Revolution, 1954-1962.
650    7 |a Cultural Council of South Lebanon. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a المجلس الثقافي للبنان الجنوبي. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Arab Spring (2010-).
650    7 |a الربيع العربي (2010-). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Lebanese University. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Jāmiʻah al-Lubnānīyah.
650    7 |a الجامعة اللبنانية. |2 J9U
650    0 |a Political participation.
650    7 |a Tagammu. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Sex crimes.
650    0 |a Jamʻīyat al-Ikhwān al-Muslimīn (Egypt).
650    7 |a Muslim Brotherhood (Egypt). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a جمعيات الإخوان المسلمين (مصر). |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Democracy.
650    7 |a Egyptian Bread Riots (1977). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a انتفاضة الخبز (1997). |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Migration.
650    7 |a Marxism. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Communism.
650    0 |a Socialism.
650    7 |a Lebanese Phalanges. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Katāʼib al-Lubnānīyah.
650    7 |a الكتائب اللبنانية. |2 J9U
650    7 |a Phalanges libanaises. |2 BNF
650    0 |a Battle of Karameh (Karāmah, Jordan : 1968).
650    7 |a معركة الكرامة (الكرامة ، الأردن: 1968). |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Charity.
650    0 |a Social movements.
650    0 |a Freedom of expression.
650    0 |a World Conference on Women (4th : 1995 : Beijing, China).
650    7 |a Islamization. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Violence against women. |2 UW-MEWA
650        |a Women -- Violence against.
650    7 |a Lebanon War (1982). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a حرب لبنان 1982. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a מלחמת לבנון הראשונה. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Hijab (Islamic clothing).
650    0 |a Lebanese Civil War (Lebanon : 1975-1990).
720 1    |a Charafeddine, Fahima. |4 ive
720        |a شرف الدين ، فهيمة. |4 ctb
720 1    |a Pratt, Nicola Christine. |4 ctb
752        |a Lebanon |b Beirut Governate |d Beirut.
830    0 |a SOAS Digital Collections.
830    0 |a Middle East Women’s Activism.
830    0 |a Lebanon Collection at SOAS, University of London.
852        |a GBR |b SDC |c Middle East Women’s Activism
856 40 |u http://digital.soas.ac.uk/CVU0000074/00001 |y Click here for full text
992 04 |a http://digital.soas.ac.uk/content/CV/U0/00/00/74/00001/CVU0000074thm.jpg
997        |a Middle East Women’s Activism


The record above was auto-generated from the METS file.