1. Gender Ideals in Turbulent Times: An Examination of Insecurity, Islam, and Muslim Men’s Gender Attitudes during the Arab Spring
- Author
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Jaime Kucinskas and Tamara van der Does
- Subjects
Middle East ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Gender studies ,Islam ,Political Islam ,Religiosity ,050903 gender studies ,Political science ,Masculinity ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,North african ,Ideology ,0509 other social sciences ,media_common - Abstract
Using Arab Barometer data (2011), the authors examine Muslim men’s gender attitudes in four predominantly Muslim Middle Eastern and North African countries (Algeria, Egypt, Tunisia, and Yemen) during the Arab Spring. They examine if living in insecurity – which may threaten men’s ability to attain masculine ideals – is related to male overcompensation, evident in strong support for patriarchal gender ideology. They then investigate if Islamic religiosity influences this relationship. Results reveal that political Islam is strongly related to Muslimmenamen’s patriarchal gender attitudes across the region. The effects of living in insecurity and other facets of Islamic religiosity on men’s gender ideology vary by country. The results on the many effects of insecurity and Islam on men’s gender ideology challenge stereotypical representations of the region as uniformly Islamic and patriarchal.
- Published
- 2017
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