Across Syria, communities are finding ways to reconnect after years of war through dialogue, storytelling, art, and collective action. Mobaderoon’s Local Peace Committees demonstrate why lasting peace begins within communities themselves.
By Khedija Arfaoui
Since the Arab Spring, Islamists have attempted to walk back women’s legal rights in Tunisia. Yet, women’s organizations and civil society groups have successfully pushed back against these forces, and even achieved ground-breaking, gender equality laws for women in several important areas.
Tunisian women were able to secure an electoral law that requires gender parity in candidate lists submitted by all political parties, a first in the Arab world.
Tunisia has a history of progressive policies and feminist activism. President Habib Bourguiba (1956-2087) viewed the emancipation of women as a requirement for the development of his country. In 1956, he promulgated the Code of Personal Status (CPS), which remains unique in the Arab World. In spite of religious leaders’ opposition, President Bourguiba abolished polygamy, early and forced marriages, repudiation, and declared equality for women and men to have education and work. President Bourguiba and his successor, Zine el Abidine Ben Ali (1987-2011), ushered in state-supported feminism in Tunisia. Beginning in the 1970’s, two women’s organizations were formed to address remaining forms of gender discrimination in the country: the Tunisian Association of Democratic Women (ATFD) and the Association of Tunisian Women for Research and Development (AFTURD). Today, ATFD and AFTURD continue to work ceaselessly to strengthen women’s rights and eradicate all forms of gender discrimination.
In recent years, a violent jihadist Islamist movement in Tunisia that is supported by oil-rich powers has launched an assault on women’s rights. This movement promotes regressive policies such as the requirement for women to wear a hijab (or niqab), prohibitions against women in the workforce, and the re-establishment of polygamy. Islamists have waged a legislative war on women’s equality, attempting to introduce Shari’a into the law. One of the targets of this campaign is CEDAW – the Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women.
Tunisia signed CEDAW in 1980 but did not ratify CEDAW until 1985, the same year as Egypt, and did so with some reservations. For example, reservations were made to CEDAW provisions guaranteeing the right to pass nationality to children; equal rights in marriage and divorce; guardianship and adoption of children, and equal property rights. Tunisia also made a more general reservation that it would not enact any laws that violate Article I of the Constitution (maintained in the 2014 Constitution) that states: “Tunisia is a free, independent, sovereign state; its religion is Islam, its language Arabic, and its system the Republic.”
Significant Legal Changes for Women in Tunisia
1956 Code of Personal Status instituted, a progressive set of laws on marriage and family
1980 Tunisia signs CEDAW
1985 Tunisia ratifies CEDAW, with reservations
2011 Tunisia becomes first country in the region to eliminate specific reservations on CEDAW
2011 Tunisia becomes first country in the Arab world to adopt a gender parity law for political party candidates
2012 “Complementary” provision is proposed in the draft Constitution
2014 New Constitution contains robust language on gender equality
Tunisia’s women have actively pressed to have the reservations lifted. In August 2011, after women’s groups led a sit-in near the Prime Ministry, the Ministers’ Council adopted a law that lifted the specific reservations on CEDAW clauses (however, the general reservation based on Article I of the Constitution was retained, opening up potential challenges from Islamists). Tunisia was the first country in the Middle East/North Africa region to remove specific reservations on CEDAW. Islamists have focused on this issue and launched a campaign against Tunisia’s compliance with CEDAW. In February 2014, Islamists introduced a bill that would cancel the lifting of the reservations on CEDAW, claiming that the treaty is against Islam and Muslim identity.
Women’s organizations have won a number of victories against these efforts. Before the first democratic elections in October 2011, Tunisian women were able to secure an electoral law that requires gender parity in candidate lists submitted by all political parties, a first in the Arab world. However, conservative forces have continued to challenge women’s equal rights. Islamists in the Constituent Assembly advocated for a “complementary” clause instead of equality provision in the new Constitution. Civil society reacted immediately against this proposal. After months of negotiations, they prevailed.
“All citizens, male and female alike, have equal rights and duties, and are equal before the law without any discrimination. The state guarantees to citizens, male and female, individual and collective rights, and provides them with conditions for a dignified life”.
– Tunisian Constitution, 2014
In January 2014, Tunisia adopted a new Constitution that ensured equality for women and men. Article 20 states: “All citizens, male and female alike, have equal rights and duties, and are equal before the law without any discrimination. The state guarantees to citizens, male and female, individual and collective rights, and provides them with conditions for a dignified life.” Although the struggle against Islamic forces that seek to backtrack women’s equality is surely not over, the women’s groups in Tunisia have demonstrated that they are up for the fight.
——————–
Khadija Arfaoui is a Tunisian freelance researcher in women and human rights. She has an M. Phil. (George Washington University) and a Doctorate at (Faculty of Arts and Humanities of Manouba in Tunis) in American and Women’s Studies. She taught at the Higher Institute of Languages of Tunis and Manouba University until her retirement. Before that, she was vice-principal and principal of secondary schools in the Tunis area.
Across Syria, communities are finding ways to reconnect after years of war through dialogue, storytelling, art, and collective action. Mobaderoon’s Local Peace Committees demonstrate why lasting peace begins within communities themselves.
ICAN Featured Innovative Peace Fund Mobaderoon Our Stories Stories WASL Updates Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
Nina Potarska, a member of the ICAN-spearheaded Women’s Alliance for Security Leadership, is currently at sea with the Global Sumud Flotilla, a civilian-led mission organized with the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, en route to Gaza.
ICAN Featured Our Stories Stories Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
مدينة البصرة في جنوب العراق، المدينة التي تضررت طويلا من الحرب وقلة الاستثمارات، تواجه تهديدات متزايدة بسبب خطاب الكراهية والتطرف وتآكل الثقة بين المواطنين والمؤسسات. وغالبا ما يقع الشباب -وخاصة الشابات- في قلب هذه التوترات، في عالم تتقاطع فيه المضايقات والتحرش الالكتروني مع الواقع. وفي مثل هذه البيئة، تتبنى جمعية الفردوس العراقية (الفردوس) نهجا جديدا […]
ICAN Featured Our Stories Stories Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
In March 2020, ICAN and its global network of women-led peacebuilding organizations, WASL, launched the She Builds Peace (SBP) campaign.
Allamin Foundation CAGEAD COEC ICAN Featured ICAN Latest Our Stories PAIMAN SBP Frameworks She Builds Peace Countries Stories WCDCA Women Relief Aid Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
Iraqi Al-Firdaws Society (Al-Firdaws) is taking a new approach to peacebuilding. Their project, Horizon: Promoting Community Peace, supported by ICAN’s Innovative Peace Fund (IPF), brings together youth, local security forces, and civil society actors to address violent extremism through dialogue, education, and community-based action.
ICAN Featured Our Stories Stories Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
ICAN convened 20 members of WASL in Lisbon for the “Our Strategies, Our Peace” Writers’ Workshop. This unique gathering provided a secure and creative space for women peacebuilders to share their strategies, experience, expertise, and stories from conflict and crisis contexts.
Addu Women's Association Allamin Foundation AWAW CAGEAD CIASE COEC ICAN Featured Mobaderoon Our Stories PAIMAN Rescue Me Stories WCDCA Wi'am Women's Alliance for Security Leadership WPSO
In South Sudan, a nation where peace has long remained fragile and democratic progress uncertain, women are stepping forward to shape the future of their country. Long excluded from the corridors of power, they are forging their own movement for lasting change.
ICAN Featured Innovative Peace Fund Our Stories Stories Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
Since gaining independence in 1948, Myanmar has been shaped by relentless conflict, political upheaval, and deep-seated resistance. Ethnic divisions, decades of military rule, and systemic gender inequality have compounded the struggles faced by women across the country. Yet, despite oppression and violence, Myanmar’s women have consistently led movements for justice and change, standing at the forefront of resistance.
GEN Myanmar ICAN Featured Innovative Peace Fund Our Stories Stories Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
ICAN facilitated a four-day peer-to-peer learning exchange in Indonesia between WASL members Empatiku and Odessa Organization for Women’s Development, from Mosul, Iraq.
Gender and Extremisms ICAN Updates Odessa Our Stories Stories Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
Representatives from ICAN and the WASL network attended the International Conference on Women, Peace, and Security (ICWPS) in Manila from October 28-30, 2024.
AMAN Indonesia Gender and Extremisms ICAN Updates Mobaderoon Our Stories PAIMAN PCID Stories Wi'am Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
From July 25–31, 40 Colombian women representing 22 regions convened in Bogotá to reaffirm their commitment to the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) Agenda and its application in the Colombian context.
CIASE ICAN Featured ICAN Updates Our Stories Stories WASL Updates Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
El proyecto "Voces femeninas para la paz" de Conciudadanía, que cuenta con el apoyo del Mecanismo de Respuesta Rápida del WPHF y de ICAN, promueve la participación política de las mujeres y sensibiliza sobre los problemas, intereses y necesidades de las mujeres del departamento de Antioquia, en el noroccidente colombiano.
Conciudadanía ICAN Featured ICAN Updates Innovative Peace Fund Our Stories Stories WASL Updates Women's Alliance for Security Leadership