330 research outputs found

    Young Saudi Women Novelists: Protesting Clericalism, Religious Fanaticism and Patriarchal Gender Order

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    From the early 1990s Saudi Arabia witnessed a significant surge in women’s writing, especially of novels. This was not a temporary phenomenon but continued into the new millennium, at which time a new generation of young woman novelists emerged who developed a deeper critique of the Saudi state and society than their predecessors in the 1990s. Three well-known and challenging novels are examined: Raja ʾ al-Saniʿ’s Banat al-Riyadh [Girls of Riyadh] (2005), Warda Abd al-Malik’s Al-awba [Return] (2008), and Samar al-Muqrin’s Nisaʾ al-munkar [Women of Vice] (2008). It is argued that a fundamental aspect of these works is their critique of religion, or at least of clerics and their discourse which, in the case of Saudi Arabia, is a profound act. It identifies two approaches by the authors: the individualization of religion and especially the re-articulation of the image of God as a friendly and humanistic God, in contrast to the official discourse; and the development of a strong anti-clerical discourse

    Phase 1 Trial of Fruquintinib in Patients with Advanced Solid Tumors: Results of the Dose Escalation Phase.

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    Background: Fruquintinib (Fruq) is a potent, highly selective, novel vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR) -1, -2, and -3 tyrosine kinase inhibitor. In the Phase III FRESCO trial1 that led to the drug approval in China, Fruq improved the median overall survival in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) in the third line or later setting when compared to placebo (9.3 vs 6.6 months); hazard ratio 0.65 (95% CI, 0.51-0.83; P \u3c .001), Methods: This is a Phase 1 open-label, dose escalation/dose expansion study conducted in the US (NCT03251378). The primary objectives are to evaluate the safety and tolerability of Fruq in pts with advanced solid tumors and to determine the recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D). A secondary objective is to evaluate anticancer activity. There were 2 dose cohorts: 3mg and 5 mg qd, each on a 3 weeks on, 1 week (3/1) off schedule. Results: Fourteen pts were enrolled: 7 (6 evaluable) pts in each dose cohort. Fruq was generally well-tolerated. There was 1 dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) of grade 4 hypertension in the 3 mg cohort, and no DLTs in the 5 mg cohort. The RP2D was 5 mg qd (3/1), which is also the approved dose in China. Two other serious adverse events were reported: colon obstruction and left breast cellulitis; neither was suspected to be drug-related. All 14 pts reported AEs; the most common were vomiting (57%), nausea (50%), constipation (50%, proteinuria (50%), hypertension (50%), dysphonia (43%), anorexia (36%), and dyspepsia (36%). Ten pts were evaluable for best objective response; results were partial response 3, stable disease 6, and disease progression 1. Objective response rate was 3/14 (21.4%) and disease control rate was 9/14 (64.3%). Mean duration on study drug was 5.3 months. Conclusion: Fruq is generally well-tolerated in heavily pretreated patients. The RP2D in US pts is 5 mg qd (3/1). The safety profile is consistent with that of other anti-angiogenic tyrosine kinase inhibitors. There is preliminary evidence of anticancer activity in pts with advanced solid tumors. The dose expansion phase of the study is ongoing. Further investigation of Fruq in pts with mCRC is planned. 1. JAMA 2018; 319:2486

    Sexual violence in Iraq: Challenges for transnational feminist politics

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    The article discusses sexual violence by ISIS against women in Iraq, particularly Yezidi women, against the historical background of broader sexual and gender-based violence. It intervenes in feminist debates about how to approach and analyse sexual and wider gender-based violence in Iraq specifically and the Middle East more generally. Recognizing the significance of positionality, the article argues against dichotomous positions and for the need to look at both macrostructural configurations of power pertaining to imperialism, neoliberalism and globalization on the one hand, and localized expressions of patriarchy, religious interpretations and practices and cultural norms on the other hand. Finally, the article reflects on the question of what a transnational feminist solidarity might look like in relation to sexual violence by ISIS

    Reconciling safe planetary targets and planetary justice: Why should social scientists engage with planetary targets?

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    As human activity threatens to make the planet unsafe for humanity and other life forms, scholars are identifying planetary targets set at a safe distance from biophysical thresholds beyond which critical Earth systems may collapse. Yet despite the profound implications that both meeting and transgressing such targets may have for human wellbeing, including the potential for negative trade-offs, there is limited social science analysis that systematically considers the justice dimensions of such targets. Here we assess a range of views on planetary justice and present three arguments associated with why social scientists should engage with the scholarship on safe targets. We argue that complementing safe targets with just targets offers a fruitful approach for considering synergies and trade-offs between environmental and social aspirations and can inform inclusive deliberation on these important issues
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