Résultats de recherche (4934)
This document presents a study on state of gender justice in the Arab Region. This study maps the current state of gender justice in the Arab region, documenting barriers as well as opportunities. Its primary research aim is to determine how to develop an environment, at the legal, policy, and social levels that is conducive to gender justice. The study also provides insight on the state of gender justice through a legal perspective, in addition to de facto perspective. This is accomplished through a review of significant legislative, political, and social changes that have arisen from 2004 to 2016.
The report is divided into three sections. The first section is concerned with young people’s opinions of the revolution, in terms of its promises and let downs, and what it has changed and what it has not. It also aims to understand how young people interpret their situation in relation to the state and its institutions. The second section deals with young people’s involvements in civil society organisations (CSOs) and political parties, and investigates the types of collective action in which they have become engaged. The third section discusses Salafism and the effects of its firmand long-standing presence in the two neighbourhoods
This survey is the first of its kind on the young people of Douar Hicher and Ettadhamen, two of the most densely populated areas in Tunisia. The report begins with an overview of the areas studied and outlines the methodology used. Findings are then presented according to respondents’ views of their area, their socio-economic background, educational status, employment status and attitudes towards work, their relationship with institutions and political life, and their attitudes towards Salafism and religion. The report finishes with some preliminary conclusions taken from
This research does not claim to fully explain the complexity of the situation in the border region of southern Tunisia, a region that has been shaken, as have other regions, by a fluid situation on both sides of the border. Following this study, Ben Guerdane and Dhehiba will no doubt continue to be partially hidden from our view in the arrangements that are made and unmade between new and old players who may be local, national or transnational, and their conflicts over revenues, hegemony and legitimacy. More modestly, the challenge of this endeavour is to illuminate the dynamics at work from the perspective of the inhabitants by offering a dual quantitative and qualitative approach capable of reconstructing the inhabitants’ perceptions of their living space while presenting the structures that condition it
This study examines the sociopolitical and psychological factors affecting, hindering, and/or promoting Palestinian women’s access to justice in the occupied Palestinian territory (OPT), with a focus on the West Bank and more specifically on “Area C.” The aim of the research is to analyze the interrelationship between Palestinian women’s experiences as they attempt to gain access to justice in the West Bank and the local Palestinian justice system, be it through formal or informal institutions, while uncovering the various layers (both tangible and intangible) of bureaucracy, challenges, and restrictions they face in the process. The study also aims to examine the considerable hindrances women face when they approach civil society organizations, political institutions, and formal and informal Palestinian and Israeli agents and institutions of socio-political control when accessing justice.