VALENTINE M.
MOGHADAM & FATIMA SADIQI   
                                                                                                           1
                                         WOMEN’S ACTIVISM AND
                                          THE PUBLIC SPHERE:
                                            An Introduction and Overview
                                  Valentine M. Moghadam and Fatima Sadiqi
                                                                         
                     T     he articles in this special issue were among those presented at a work-
                           shop we organized for the Sixth Mediterranean Social and Political
                     Research Meeting, which took place from 16‒20 March 2005, in Monte-
                     catini, Italy. The purpose of the workshop was to examine the proposition
                     that the public sphere in a number of MENA countries is changing and
                     civil society becoming “feminized” due to women’s greater social partici-
                     pation, the proliferation of women’s organizations, their involvement in
                     or initiation of public debates and national dialogues, and their access to
                     various forms of media. Twelve papers were submitted and presented at
                     the workshop, leading to a very lively discussion, but only a few could be
                     included in this special issue. The papers lay out the complexity of various
                     versions of women’s activism, their intricate relations with public space,
                     and how that plays out in contemporary political and legal debates. In
                     what remains, we provide a brief introduction to the guiding ideas and an
                     overview of the papers’ arguments and findings.
                            In Habermas’ conceptualization, the “public sphere” is a modern
                     institution and a set of values that brings private persons together in
                     public to engage in a context of reasoned debates (Habermas 1989). Civil
                     society—the non-state realm of associational life, civility in public dis-
                     course, and state-society relations—constitutes an important part of the
                                                   JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EAST WOMEN’S STUDIES
                                                         Vol. 2, No. 2 (Spring 2006). © 2006
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                        JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EAST WOMEN’S STUDIES
                     public sphere of media and other forums of public opinion. As feminist
                     scholars have pointed out (Fraser 1996; Lister 1997), civil society and the
                     public sphere historically were cast as male, although women’s suffrage
                     and the women’s movement expanded, democratized, and feminized
                     these spheres in the course of the twentieth century.
                           The public sphere has been conceptualized largely in connection
                     with the single society and the nation-state, but processes of globaliza-
                     tion suggest the emergence of a “global space” within which reasoned
                     debates, associational activities, and collective action take place. This
                     is the impetus for the new literature on “global civil society” (Florini
                     2000), the “transnational public sphere” (Guidry, Kennedy, and Zald
                     1999), “transnational social movements” (Smith, Chatfield, and Pagnucco
                     1997), “transnational advocacy networks” (Keck and Sikkink 1998), and
                     “transnational feminist networks” (Moghadam 2005).
                           A burgeoning literature on civil society, citizenship, and democra-
                     tization has emerged in the context of Middle East Studies, in tandem
                     with a body of work by feminist scholars (Brynen, Korany, and Noble
                     1995, 1998; El-Sayyid 1994; Norton 1995; Arat 1994; Brand 1998; Botman
                     1999; Joseph 2000; Moghadam 2003; Sadiqi 2003). As an earlier
                     generation of feminist scholars noted for the West, the public sphere
                     of politics in MENA has been cast as male and distinguished from the
                     private sphere of women-and-the-family. Moreover, the state and the
                     market have been long regarded as masculine domains. Rights of the
                     citizen—limited for all in the authoritarian and neopatriarchal states
                     of MENA—have been differentiated by gender (and religion). It is this
                     state of affairs that is being contested by an emerging social and political
                     constituency—women—who are motivated by aspirations for equality
                     and enhanced rights and who also draw on international standards, con-
                     ventions, and networks in support of their claims. As a social movement,
                     women’s activism in the public sphere uses strategies that do not reproduce
                     Western frameworks but that feed into global synergy with their guiding
                     cultural worldviews. It is only through understandings of intercultural
                     worldviews and various meanings of “pragmatism” that MENA women’s
                     rights tactics can be appreciated globally (Sadiqi forthcoming).
                           The papers in this special issue explore the changing nature of
                     the public sphere in MENA and women’s contributions to it, as well as
                     women’s involvement in the transnational public sphere, through an
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                                                              VALENTINE M. MOGHADAM & FATIMA SADIQI   
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                     examination of countries such as Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Jordan,
                     where these changes have been observed.
                           An examination of political developments over the past decade in
                     MENA countries leads to the formulation of the following propositions.
                           Proposition 1. The public sphere in a number of MENA countries
                     is being engendered and feminized because of the emergence of women
                     as political actors/agents and as an increasingly important political
                     constituency—as voters, as members of parliament and local councils,
                     as civil servants, as new “public intellectuals,” as participants in civil
                     society organizations (e.g., human rights organizations and professional
                     associations), and as heads of women’s organizations, associations, and
                     networks. As such, women are challenging the patriarchal underpinnings
                     of state and society and the monopoly of the state and of men over the
                     public sphere.
                           Proposition 2. Women’s strategic use of the media as a means of
                     access to the public sphere transforms and feminizes both. This includes
                     the print media, including the women’s press (e.g., women’s magazines
                     and newspapers, women’s studies journals, novels and poetry produced
                     by women, women-owned publishing houses) and films (the emergence
                     of women filmmakers, as well as the growing importance of women’s
                     issues in filmmaking). In addition, the participation of women in the
                     establishment media provides a voice and a platform for the dissemina-
                     tion of women’s issues.
                           Proposition 3. Women’s contributions and participation are leading
                     to the democratization of the public sphere and the formation of a mod-
                     ern civil society—in contradistinction to forms of clientelism, masculine
                     privilege, and “primordial associations” that have hitherto characterized
                     these domains (see Ibrahim 1992; Turner 2000). In Turkey, Tunisia,
                     Algeria, and Morocco, women’s rights activists see their movements and
                     organizations as both democratic and feminist, and they have widened
                     the discursive space through the language of liberalism, individualism
                     and autonomy, secularism, and Islamic feminism (Arat 1994; Sadiqi 1999,
                     2003; Moghadam 2003).
                           Proposition 4. Women’s roles in Shari’a law-changing and legal
                     reform evince an unprecedented form of women’s agency and insertion
                     in the public sphere. As women increasingly participate in public debates
                     around family law and their place in society, ideas and practices that have
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                        JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EAST WOMEN’S STUDIES
                     long been taken for granted and understood as Islamic are being confront-
                     ed and challenged. Such women’s participation helps to promote thinking
                     about Islam that is not limited to self-ascribed religious authorities.
                           In addition to the above propositions, several questions were pre-
                     sented to the workshop participants to guide their research:
                           (1) What are the different strategies—including discourses, forms
                     of collective action, and extent of coalition-building within and across
                     countries—pursued by the women’s movement and organizations in each
                     country?
                           (2) What is the relationship of the women’s movement to the state, and
                     what is the state’s position vis-à-vis women/feminists in the public sphere?
                     This will entail addressing the extent of “state feminism,” the efficacy of the
                     women’s official organizations, the question of Convention to End Discrimi-
                     nation Against Women (CEDAW), revisions of family law, etc.
                           (3) What has been the influence of women’s activism or “the woman
                     question” on the public discourse(s), for example, through the women’s
                     press and other media?
                           (4) What is the role or influence of global forces and developments
                     in creating new political spaces and a more inclusive public sphere in
                     MENA, particularly where women are concerned?
                           Local/global linkages are exemplified by developments in the Magh-
                     reb. Here, women’s activism in the public sphere has centred largely on
                     the family law around which other discourses of equality and individual
                     rights are expressed. This activism is perceived as a new form of resis-
                     tance to the various forms of patriarchal oppression. With the advent
                     of globalization, this struggle is no longer dictated by local concerns
                     only—it is also heavily influenced by international discourses. The recent
                     debate on the Moroccan Family Law showed that women’s organizations
                     were inserting themselves into the public sphere, changing the terms of
                     participation in this sphere, and making women and gender issues a mat-
                     ter of national dialogue and contention. Both national and international
                     discourses and connections had an impact on the debates, on the King’s
                     speech of 10 October 2003, and on the parliament’s passing of the bill.
                                                   OVERVIEW OF THE PAPERS
                             Michaelle Browers’ paper sets the stage by drawing attention to the
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                                                              VALENTINE M. MOGHADAM & FATIMA SADIQI   
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                     marginalization of women, as well as women’s rights issues, from high-
                     level discussions. In examining the “Nationalist-Islamist Conferences”
                     that were convened between 1994 and 2004 by the Center for Arab Unity
                     Studies in Beirut, she shows that this particular corner of the Arab public
                     sphere has studiously avoided taking up gender issues. This is one clear
                     reason why women’s organizations have been so resolutely asserting
                     themselves in the public sphere.
                           Loubna Skalli then places the spotlight on women and informa-
                     tion technologies in the region. Although the use of the Internet is not
                     yet widespread and its potential has not been realized, Skalli elucidates
                     the influence of crusading journalists (e.g., Rana Husseini of Jordan),
                     feminist publishing houses, and documentary filmmaking on the pub-
                     lic sphere. In politics also, and as Abdelkader Cheref demonstrates, a
                     number of outstanding Algerian women leaders and dissidents have
                     been developing what can only be called a counter-hegemonic discourse.
                     Focusing on three feminist leaders, Cheref explores governmental and
                     societal attitudes toward them, as well as their place in the Algerian
                     feminist movement.
                           In their case study of Morocco, Fatima Sadiqi and Moha Ennaji
                     demonstrate the strategies of the women’s organizations in the struggle
                     for the Family Law reform and show how the “gradual reorganization of
                     space” paved the way for the visibility of women’s issues and the need for
                     legal reform. Finally, Carol Malt highlights the role that museums play
                     in the public sphere and the broader implications of the feminization of
                     museum employment. MENA women museum staff may yet realize the
                     potential powerful role they can play culturally.
                           Overall, the papers in this volume explore women’s contributions to
                     the changing nature of the public sphere in the MENA region. The local
                     linkages within particular countries exhibit both common patterns and
                     specific characteristics. The specificities stem from sociopolitical environ-
                     ments and events, along with domestic discourses that may be distinctive
                     to that place and time. Common patterns attest not only to the similari-
                     ties in family laws, Islamic norms, and patriarchal practices but also to
                     the salience of global influences and the relationship between women’s
                     movements in the MENA region and the global women’s rights agenda.
                           By gathering the papers in this volume, we hope to lay the ground-
                     work for more investigations into the broader significance of women’s
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                     activism in the MENA region, particularly with respect to civil society,
                     the public sphere, democratization, and transnational linkages. Feminist
                     activism is propelling non-state actors to the forefront of social change,
                     making them of inescapable relevance for governments and the global
                     system. The themes of the papers regarding public debates and knowl-
                     edge-production, the media, policymaking, legal change, and cultural in-
                     fluence attest to the impact women are having on the MENA public scene
                     and the influence they are having on public opinion. Civil society, in its
                     constituent diversity, is a key promoter of democratization. Its power is
                     not the authority to decide or to enforce. It is the capacity to argue, to
                     denounce, to propose, to experiment, and to innovate.
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