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WMC Women Under Siege
September 20, 2012 | Vibeke Brask Thomsen | International, Violence against women
Will NATO leave Afghan women at risk?
After a decade in Afghanistan, NATO member states are preparing to remove their troops. The organization and the International Security Assistance Forces (ISAF) it leads have shifted from combat to preparing local forces for transition. Yet for the country to thrive post-war, ISAF will have to place special emphasis on gender issues.
WMC News & Features
September 20, 2012 | Emily Wilson | Arts and culture, Girls, International, Media, Religion
Filmmaker Explores India's Complex Identity
In "The World Before Her," Nisha Pahuja looks at the extremes of India's evolving notions of gender.
WMC Women Under Siege
September 14, 2012 | Soraya Chemaly | International, Violence against women
Why everyday gender inequality could lead to our next war
What if I suggested that reducing the rates of rape and sexism in the U.S. would reduce our risk of international conflict? You might think that American girls and women who regularly adapt their lives to deal with “harmless” street harassment, or who are assaulted by American men, have little to do with, say, the Iraq War. Yet research shows an undeniable relationship between the treatment of women in everyday life and a nation’s propensity for engaging in war.
WMC Women Under Siege
September 07, 2012 | Laura Bates | International, Violence against women
What’s in a name? The rhetoric of rape
Campaigners in Egypt have recently drawn attention to the increasingly widespread sexual harassment, assault, and rape suffered by women in public spaces. The severity of the situation there well documented and longstanding, with women suffering “violations of their human rights” in the form of intrusive virginity tests, “assault and torture,” and even “being dragged naked on the ground,” according to a 2011 press release from the Egyptian Center for Women's Rights.
WMC Women Under Siege
September 06, 2012 | Josh Shahryar | International, Violence against women
The myth of how the hijab protects women against sexual assault
I was only 6 years old when my family was forced to flee the civil war in Afghanistan for Pakistan in the late 1980s. My sister, Neelo, who is five years older than me, was enrolled in a Saudi-funded Muslim Brotherhood-inspired public school for Afghan refugees. She, like many Muslim women, wore a simple headscarf.
WMC Women Under Siege
September 04, 2012 | Michele Lent Hirsch | International, Media, Violence against women
Forced sterilization: Big media stories versus the big picture
Sweden. California. Peru. All three make lovely vacation spots, sure, but they share something more sinister, too: a state-sponsored violence so furtive, even victims don’t always know it’s taking place. Add to that list Norway, Finland, Kenya, Venezuela, and 31 more U.S. states, and you begin to see the scope of forced sterilization.
WMC News & Features
August 28, 2012 | Kathleen Barry | Feminism, International, Violence against women
Abolishing Prostitution: A Feminist Human Rights Treaty
The author, long active in global human rights, argues that the time is ripe for a UN treaty to bolster ongoing efforts to end prostitution.
WMC News & Features
August 22, 2012 | Rebecca Chodorkoff | International, Violence against women
A Champion for Congolese Women
Justine Bihama is making a difference at the world's epicenter of rape—in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
WMC Women Under Siege
August 16, 2012 | Laura Bates | International, Violence against women
A crime upon a crime: Rape, victim-blaming, and stigma
In Sudan, where tens of thousands of people have been displaced from their homes by fighting and destruction, where the lives of refugees have already been devastated by the loss of their homes and families, women bear a second, enduring pain. Because for many Darfuri women, the “crime” of falling victim to rapists and sexual attackers renders them valueless, “dishonored,” and rejected.
WMC Women Under Siege
August 14, 2012 International, Media, Violence against women
Video: WMC's Women Under Siege director tells CNN of the horrors we've documented in Syria
As the media continues to learn about reports of sexualized violence in Syria, CNN's Brooke Baldwin talks to WMC's Women Under Siege Director Lauren Wolfe about what we've documented so far.
WMC Women Under Siege
August 14, 2012 | Elaine Replogle | Girls, International, Violence against women
In wartime Berlin, rape took no sides
Not every survivor wants to talk about rape. We know that many women and men choose to keep their stories private, be it to move past their abuse internally or, perhaps more often, to avoid being shunned or re-attacked. We also know that open conversation about sexualized violence is something whole societies still grapple with: From Sudan to the United States, it is only in the last few decades that a respectful public dialogue has begun. It is that much more important, then, to recognize historical examples—the few instances in which women did come forward despite a climate that was likely even more judgmental than today’s.
WMC News & Features
August 13, 2012 | Kali Villarosa | Girls, International, Media, Race/Ethnicity, Sports
In Awe of Teen Olympians
The author, herself a young athlete, wonders how the young Olympians can accomplish so much with everybody in the world looking on—and commenting on their every move.
WMC Women Under Siege
August 08, 2012 | Soraya Chemaly | International, Violence against women
For women, there are no ‘just wars’
No one wants to go to war. Before we commit soldiers and societies to inevitable sacrifice and atrocities, we try to balance the inevitable harm against the potential good. We seek to make the wars we undertake “just” by applying defined criteria to a scale of moral weights and principled measures. Men are tortured and die, women are raped and murdered, children suffer and starve.
WMC News & Features
August 07, 2012 | Shazia Z. Rafi | International, Violence against women
Treaty to Control Arms Trade Derailed For Now
The author, secretary-general of Parliamentarians for Global Action, explains how pre-election timidity has caused the United States to stymie an international effort to regulate the dangerous arms trade industry.
WMC Women Under Siege
August 06, 2012 | Louise Hogan | International, Violence against women
#SudanRevolts: Women lead a revolution
In June, female students at the University of Khartoum held an impromptu demonstration against the dramatic rise in the cost of living in Sudan. Rising inflation, exacerbated by the secession of South Sudan in July 2011 and with it, a third of Khartoum’s revenue, has led to soaring costs in the country. Many people struggle to make ends meet, not least university students who find it difficult to cover even the most basic needs.
WMC Women Under Siege
July 30, 2012 Girls, International, Violence against women
Syrian-American tells UN of cultural reasons why rape in Syria may be underreported
Safa Sankari, a member of our Syria team, spoke at the UN on July 18 as part of a presentation of our first findings of a data analysis of our crowdmap of sexualized violence in Syria. Sankari, who is Syrian-American, is the co-founder and president of the Syrian American Medical Society’s Michigan Chapter Foundation, a nonprofit organization that helps in the humanitarian and medical needs of Syrians. WMC’s Women Under Siege Director Lauren Wolfe also spoke. You can read her testimony here.
WMC Women Under Siege
July 27, 2012 | Michelle Seyler | Immigration, International, Violence against women
For immigrant women in U.S., reporting abuse rarely an option
Imagine living every day with the terror that, at any moment, you might be ripped apart from your family, your home, your job, your livelihood, your friends. Imagine feeling as though you have no choice but to risk all of this to report a case of rape or domestic violence. Such is the dilemma for countless immigrant women in the United States: Either suffer silently—often at the hands of husbands or family members—or go to the police and risk deportation.
WMC News & Features
July 27, 2012 | Holly Kearl | Arts and culture, International, Media, Violence against women
Egyptians Mobilize Against Sexual Harassment
In Cairo, performers and artists take to the streets to make them safe for women.
WMC Women Under Siege
July 25, 2012 | Laura Bates, Lauren Wolfe | International, Violence against women
Ideas into action? A view from inside the UK's new initiative to stop rape in war
You may have heard that the UK recently launched a new initiative aimed at preventing sexualized violence in conflict. We’ve been fortunate enough to be part of the early stages of this ambitious new project, which has invited participation from NGOs and experts around the world.
WMC News & Features
July 25, 2012 | Mary C. Curtis | International, Politics, Race/Ethnicity
Feeling American in Paris
As an African American, multi-media journalist Mary C. Curtis enjoyed a welcoming interest among the French—a respect for black culture too often missing back home.
WMC Women Under Siege
July 18, 2012 | Lauren Wolfe | International, Media, Violence against women
Our testimony to the UN today on sexualized violence in Syria
The UN asked me to present the first findings of a data analysis from our crowdmap of sexualized violence in Syria as the Security Council gears up to vote on international sanctions--potentially on Friday. Below is my testimony to a room that contained members of the council from France, Portugal, the European Union delegation, Egypt, Italy, and perhaps a few members from Syria (the jury's out on that).
WMC News & Features
July 18, 2012 | Amy DePaul | Education, Girls, International, Religion
Filmmakers Find Surprises at an Islamic School for Girls in Syria
Airing this week on PBS, "The Light in Her Eyes" portrays a religious teacher pursuing a complicated set of goals to enrich her students' lives.
WMC Women Under Siege
July 16, 2012 | Lauren Wolfe | International, Violence against women
The number you need to know on Syria
I’ll start with a simple number: 20,000. Granted it’s rounded up a little—from 19,738. Rounding up works well on the page, but also belittles its subject. It gives us a solid number to latch on to, for the media to print, for the memory to hold. But 19,738 is the exact count of lives that have been lost so far in the war in Syria, according to a volunteer, nonprofit group called Syria Tracker. And when it comes to this conflict, every little number, every single life, counts.
WMC Women Under Siege
July 11, 2012 | Lauren Wolfe | International, Violence against women
The ultimate assault: Charting Syria's use of rape to terrorize its people

A woman swathed in black squares her shoulders and calmly looks into a camera. She holds a Quran. Only a sliver of her face—her eyeglasses—shows. “What happened to me hasn’t happened to anyone, or if it has affected anyone else I do not know,” she says. “But I will speak and let all the people know what [Syrian leader] Bashar al-Assad and his men are doing.” Over the next four minutes, her breathing grows labored and her voice breaks as she describes how, in May 2011, five men wearing black entered her home on the outskirts of Homs and raped her.

WMC FBomb
July 10, 2012 | Reem B | Feminism, International, Politics
Women's Suffrage in Egypt: I Thought We Established That
I live in Egypt and, contrary to what many Western people seem to believe, we live in apartments, do not use camels or horses for transportation, spend most of our time in front of T.Vs, computers, sm...
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