Women of Libya

This month’s Le Monde Diplomatique has an interesting piece on Libya that, while focused on international relations, also has some interesting social commentary, particularly on the position of women.

One thing that has really changed in the past three years is that you see women in the streets after nightfall. They go shopping in the new boutiques that stay open until midnight, or stop in a cafe,” said an Algerian expatriate.

Gaddafi, for all his many faults, has frequently been a supporter of women’s rights, claiming headscarfs to be “an invention of Satan”, but he is up against powerful conservative social forces. One woman interviewed explains how being divorced is a problem for women because it is not socially acceptable for them to live alone, but often not practical for them to return to the “family home”, which may have been taken over by a brother and his wife. But still the fact that it is being comtemplated is an encouraging sign.

Unfortunately this piece isn’t free on the web, but there is a lot of good free stuff on the monthly’s website.

(Declaration of interest – it is associated with The Guardian Weekly, for which I work, and with which it is available.)

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