Women’s Voices Rise as Rwanda Reinvents Itself

Posted by on February 26, 2005
Women’s Voices Rise as Rwanda Reinvents Itself

This article was originally published in The New York Times. The most remarkable thing about Rwanda’s Parliament is not the war-damaged building that houses it, with its bullet holes and huge artillery gashes still visible a decade after the end of the fighting. It is inside the hilltop structure, from the spectator seats of the […]

Women’s Rights: Iran’s Bitter Lessons for Iraq

Posted by on February 7, 2005
Women’s Rights: Iran’s Bitter Lessons for Iraq

This article, co-authored by Swanee Hunt and Isobel Coleman, was originally published by International Herald Tribune. Before the recent elections, leading Iraqi politicians did their best to assuage concerns of their more secular compatriots by promising moderation and inclusion. But election rhetoric is not reality. An important test will be how these leaders address women’s […]

Muslim Women in the Bosnian Crucible

Posted by on September 24, 2004

In this academic piece for the journal Sex Roles, Hunt interviewed 26 Bosnian women from different ethnic, religious, and political backgrounds. Challenging misconceptions about the role of Islam in Bosnia, the women reflected on three interconnected features of their lives: “the effect on sex roles of the political turmoil of the past century, the particular […]

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