Local voices against violence: women challenging extremism in Iraq and Syria
Local voices against violence: women challenging extremism in Iraq and Syria
A significant proportion of research and initiatives challenging violence within Iraq and Syria centres on the international threat posed by Islamic State (Daesh). Consequently, much of this work is funded, designed, managed and implemented by external actors, with a security focus on Salafi-Jihadist groups and the mobilisation of (male) combatants. This paper has a dual purpose: to review and evaluate the progress of localised initiatives inside Iraq and Syria that focus on social cohesion and resilience to violence, and to explore and showcase the engagement of local women in this field. Drawing on multi-sector accounts of women serves to highlight and better understand their individual experiences, and the challenges and opportunities for female voices to be considered, amplified and impactful. This scope provides insight into individual and communal vulnerabilities to ‘radicalisation’ within Iraq and Syria and explores the successes and failures of female-led counter-initiatives. The paper underscores the experiences of these women from a local and non-western perspective and sheds light on what is being done on the ground to challenge violence post-Daesh.
247-271
Al-Kadi, Alia
fb858562-998c-4941-8d64-62102742613f
Vale, Gina
2ba760f9-72c2-4c84-8502-6c260d079a4f
4 February 2020
Al-Kadi, Alia
fb858562-998c-4941-8d64-62102742613f
Vale, Gina
2ba760f9-72c2-4c84-8502-6c260d079a4f
Al-Kadi, Alia and Vale, Gina
(2020)
Local voices against violence: women challenging extremism in Iraq and Syria.
Conflict, Security & Development, 20 (2), .
(doi:10.1080/14678802.2020.1719702).
Abstract
A significant proportion of research and initiatives challenging violence within Iraq and Syria centres on the international threat posed by Islamic State (Daesh). Consequently, much of this work is funded, designed, managed and implemented by external actors, with a security focus on Salafi-Jihadist groups and the mobilisation of (male) combatants. This paper has a dual purpose: to review and evaluate the progress of localised initiatives inside Iraq and Syria that focus on social cohesion and resilience to violence, and to explore and showcase the engagement of local women in this field. Drawing on multi-sector accounts of women serves to highlight and better understand their individual experiences, and the challenges and opportunities for female voices to be considered, amplified and impactful. This scope provides insight into individual and communal vulnerabilities to ‘radicalisation’ within Iraq and Syria and explores the successes and failures of female-led counter-initiatives. The paper underscores the experiences of these women from a local and non-western perspective and sheds light on what is being done on the ground to challenge violence post-Daesh.
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 February 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 February 2020
Published date: 4 February 2020
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Local EPrints ID: 472192
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472192
ISSN: 1467-8802
PURE UUID: fc6bdaab-e152-49ec-b4a6-7c058549e04e
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Date deposited: 29 Nov 2022 17:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:14
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Author:
Alia Al-Kadi
Author:
Gina Vale
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