Sexuality, Development and Islamophilia in the Arab Uprisings: The Missing Links
Social justice that inspired millions to take to the streets of Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen and Libya
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Social justice that inspired millions to take to the streets of Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen and Libya
The Cairo Regional Bureau of the World Food Programme (WFP) and the Centre for Social Protection at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) at the University of Sussex conducted a scoping study of social protection programmes in the Middle East and North Africa region.
Published by: Open Democracy
Human security - the idea of putting the security apparatus in the service of people's needs for safety and protection, rather than the security interests of a ruling regime or the interests of international actors, has never had a chance to thrive in Egypt - or in any other country that has experienced revolts.
The 16-day anti-violence campaign refers to the state's responsibility in perpetuating violence, and justifiably so: the dysfunctional role of the police in protecting women from violence on the streets of Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Libya and Iraq is a flagrant violation of their most basic citizenship rights.
Published by: UNRISD
The question, then, is why political and civil society organizations and institutions have become marginal to the ways through which people engage politically?
Published by: The Guardian
The west failed to 'see like citizens' and missed the signs that people in Egypt, Tunisia and Yemen were at breaking point.
Report on a visit to the Kalyanpur, Dhaka crisis monitoring ‘sentinel site’ in August 2009.