Synopses & Reviews
Women the world over are being prevented from engaging in politics. Women's political leadership of any sort is a rarity and a career in politics rarer still. We have, however, begun to understand what it takes to create an enabling environment for women's political participation.
In this exciting and pioneering collection, writers from Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East are brought together for the first time to talk explicitly about women's participation in the political scene across the global South. Answering such questions as how women can get political apprenticeship opportunities, how these opportunities translate into the pursuit of a political career, and how these pursuits then influence the kind of political platform women advocate once in power, Women in Politics is essential reading for anyone interested in what it means to engage politically.
About the Author
Mariz Tadros is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies in the UK. She was formerly a professor of political science at the American University in Cairo and worked for almost ten years as a journalist for Al-Ahram Weekly newspaper. Her most recent publications are The Muslim Brotherhood in Contemporary Egypt: Democracy Redefined or Confined? (Routledge 2012) and Copts at the Crossroads The struggle for inclusive democracy in Egypt (Oxford University Press of America 2013) and the editor of The Pulse of Egypt's Revolt (IDS Bulletin 43.1. January 2012) and Religion, gender and rights at the crossroads (IDS Bulletin 42.1. January 2011). She works on democratization in the Middle East, religion and development, the politics of gender and development and Islamist political movements in the Middle East. Her work has featured in the Guardian, Opendemocracy and Middle East Report.
Table of Contents
Introduction. Engaging Politically: Rethinking Women’s Pathways to Power?
Mariz Tadros
1. Politics as Service: Pathways of District Assembly Women in Ghana
Takyiwaa Manuh
2. Exceptional Women: Reserved Councillors in Municipal Corporations in Bangladesh
Sohela Nazneen, Iqbal Ehsan and Bayazid Hasan
3. Ejecting Women from Formal Politics in the 'Old-New' Egypt (2011-12)
Mariz Tadros
4. Local Power and Women’s Empowerment in a Conflict Context: Palestinian Women Contesting Power in Chaos
Islah Jad
5. Pathways to Political Power in Sudan
Sara Abbas
6. Crafting Political Pathways through the Exclusionary Mesh in India
Kanchan Mathur
7. Independent Candidacy: An Alternative Political Pathway for Women in Sierra Leone?
Hussaina J. Abdullah
8. Conservative Modernization in Brazil: Blocking Local Women’s Political Pathways to Power
Ana Alice Alcantara Costa and Andrea Cornwall