TY - BOOK AU - Howland,Courtney W. TI - Religious fundamentalisms and the human rights of women AV - K3243.H864.R455 1999 PY - 1999/// CY - New York PB - St. Martin's Press KW - Women's rights KW - Women and religion KW - Religious fundamentalism N1 - 2; Fundamentalism; John Stratton Hawley --; Christian fundamentalism: patriarchy, sexuality, and human rights; Susan D. Rose --; What is your tribe?: women's struggles and the construction on Muslimness; Marie-Aimee Helie-Lucas --; The personal is political: Jewish fundamentalism and women's empowerment; Nira Yuval-Davis --; Relativism, culture, religion, and identity; Michael Singer --; Cultural relativism and international law; Christine Chinkin --; Gender apartheid and the discourse of relativity of rights in Muslim societies; Mahnaz Afkhami --; Different but free: cultural relativism and women's rights as human rights; Radhika Coomaraswamy --; Safeguarding women's political freedoms under the international Covenant on Civil and Political Rights in the face of religious fundamentalism; Courtney W. Howland --; Religious reservations to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women: what do they really mean?; Ann Elizabeth Mayer --; Women's equal right to freedom of religion or belief: an important but neglected subject; Bahia G. Tahzib-Lie --; The potential of international law to combat discrimination against girls in education; Geraldine Van Bueren and Deirdre Fottrell --; The two faces of secularism and women's rights in India; Ratna Kapur --; Religion and patriarchal politics: the Israeli experience; Frances Raday --; Family disputes involving Muslim women in contemporary Europe: immigrant women caught between Islamic family law and women's rights; Marie-Claire S.F.G. Foblets --; Finding out feet, standing our ground: reproductive health activism in an era of rising fundamentalism and economic globalization; Lynn P. Freedman --; Roman Catholic fundamentalism: what's sex (and power) got to do with it?; Frances Kissling --; Reconciling the opposites: equal but subordinate; Asma M. Abdel Halim --; Buddhism and human rights in the Thai sex trade; Lucinda Joy Peach; --; Women educating women in the Afghan diaspora: why and how; Sakena Yacoobi --; Challenging Christian fundamentalism: organizing an alternative to the religious right in your state; Cecile Richards --; Gender-based asylum in the United States: a view from the trenches; Paul Nejelski --; Tales of subversion: women challenging fundamentalism in the Islamic Republic of Iran; Azar Nafisi --; A feminist perspective on Jewish fundamentalism; Paula E. Hyman --; Truth over convention: feminist interpretations of Buddhism; Suwanna Satha-Anand --; Religion and women's rights: the fundamentalist face of Catholicism in Brazil; Maria Jose F. Rosado Nunes --; Reclaiming the religious center from a Muslim perspective: theological alternatives to religious fundamentalism; Ghazala Anwar; 2 N2 - "Dialogue on the conflict between religious fundamentalism and women's rights is often stymied by an "all or nothing" approach: fundamentalists claim absolute religious freedom, while some feminists dismiss religion entirely as being so imbued with patriarchy as to be eternally opposed to women's rights. This ignores, though, the experiences of religious women who suffer under fundamentalism and fight to resist it, perceiving themselves to be at once religious and feminist. In Religious Fundamentalisms and the Human Rights of Women, Howland provides a forum for these different scholars, both religious and nonreligious, to meet and seek common ground in their fight against fundamentalism."--Jacket ER -