Description
Book SynopsisA fresh interpretation of U.S. relations with the Muslim world since 1979
Americans'' concerns about women''s human rights in Muslim countries were triggered by the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and have evolved within the context of long-standing Western stereotypes about Muslims, as well as transnational feminism and the global human rights movement. As these frameworks simultaneously competed against and reinforced one another, U.S. public conversations about Muslim women intensified, culminating in feminist campaigns and U.S. policies that aimed to defend women''s rights in Islamic countries—such was the case with the Clinton administration''s decision not to recognize the Taliban regime after they seized control of Afghanistan in 1996.
U.S. Foreign Policy and Muslim Women''s Human Rights provides a fresh interpretation of U.S. relations with the Muslim world and, more broadly, U.S. foreign relations history and the history of human rights. Kelly J. Sh
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"U.S. Foreign Policy and Muslim Women's Human Rights represents a welcome addition to an important historiography . . . Shannon breaks new ground, not only because she covers the late twentieth century-when women wielded real policymaking power-but also because she analyzes discourse, activism, and policymaking in a single frame." * Diplomatic History *
"U.S. Foreign Policy and Muslim Women's Human Rights is a timely addition to the corpus of texts on US foreign policy, human rights, and US relations with Muslim states. In the current political climate of fading human rights commitments and the rhetoric that emboldens anti-Muslim practices, the book offers a powerful reminder of the role of human rights in the US national identity and lessons that can be used for charting its way forward." * H-Diplo *
"This book is excellent: cautious but cogent in its arguments, comprehensive in its research, and balanced, but not bland, in its conclusions. Kelly Shannon demonstrates that issues of women and gender have infiltrated U.S. policymaking circles concerned with the Muslim Middle East since 1979, and, while she is not the first to suggest this, she is emphatically the first to trace these issues systematically through recent history and to elucidate them so fully." * Andrew J. Rotter, Colgate University *
"This important and persuasively argued book challenges much recent literature on the United States and the Middle East to reveal how women's rights emerged as an important lens for imagining the Islamic world. While some policymakers have cynically sought to justify intervening in the Middle East in the name of women, Shannon shows how activists both at home and abroad sought to reshape conceptions of U.S. National Security to place women at the center, sometimes challenging U.S. empire in the process." * Brad Simpson, University of Connecticut *
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1. Battling the Veil: American Reactions to the Iranian Revolution
Chapter 2. Muslim Women in U.S. Public Discourse After 1979
Chapter 3. Sisterhood Is Global: Transnational Feminism and Islam
Chapter 4. The First Gulf War and Saudi "Gender Apartheid"
Chapter 5. Female Genital Mutilation and U.S. Policy in the 1990s
Chapter 6. The Taliban, Feminist Activism, and the Clinton Administration
Chapter 7. Muslim Women's Human Rights and U.S. Foreign Policy Since 9/11
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments