48 research outputs found

    Diasporic virginities: social representations of virginity and identity formation amongst British arab muslim women

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    This study compares how practising and non-practising British Arab Muslim women position themselves in relation to representations of virginity. Overall, in our qualitative study, we found that representations of culture and religion influenced social practices and social beliefs in different ways: non-practising Muslim women felt bound by culture to remain virgins, while practising Muslim women saw it as a religious obligation but were still governed by culture regarding the consequences of engaging in premarital sex. Interestingly, some practising Muslim participants used Mut’a (a form of temporary ‘marriage’) to justify premarital sex. This, however, did not diminish the importance of virginity in their understanding and identification as Arab women. In fact, this study found that virginity, for the British Arabs interviewed, embodied a sense of ‘Arabness’ in British society. Positioning themselves as virgins went beyond simply honour; it was a significant cultural symbol that secured their sense of cultural identity. In fact this cultural identity was often so powerful that it overrode their Islamic identities, prescribing their behaviour even if religion was seen as more ‘forgiving’

    Interview with Nawal El Saadawi (Cairo, 29th January 2006)

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    Distributed generations planning using flower pollination algorithm for enhancing distribution system voltage stability

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    Distributed generations (DGs) have been utilized in some electric power networks. Power loss reductions, voltage improvement, increasing reliability, postponement of system upgrading and environmental friendliness are some advantages of DG-unit applications. This paper presents a new optimization approach that employs a flower pollination algorithm (FPA) to determine the optimal DG-unit’s size and location in order to minimize the total system real power loss and improve the system buses voltage. The FPA is a new metaheuristic optimization technique and it is inspired by the reproduction strategy of the flow pollination process of flowering plants. To reveal the validity of the FPA algorithm, IEEE 33-bus, 69-bus and 136-bus radial distribution test systems are examined with different test cases of the objective function using the MATLAB. Furthermore, the results obtained by the proposed FPA algorithm are compared with other metaheuristic optimization techniques such as backtracking search optimization algorithm, artificial bee colony, and selection algorithm. The outcomes verify that the FPA algorithm is efficient, robust, and capable of handling mixed integer nonlinear optimization problems

    Professionalizing Youth Work: A Global Perspective

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    Reflections on Reading Spare Rib: Personal and Political

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    Spare Rib became part of my developing feminist consciousness and its effect was considerable. Only in retrospect can I see the long-lasting relevance of this iconic publication to my teaching career and its impact on a personal worldview that is still unfolding. Spare Rib foregrounded empowerment of women, recognised tensions and published politically focussed debates. It neither carried the message that feminism is not a monolith nor located to any one group or location. Spare Rib set itself up as a dialogical space for women’s liberation with all its inherent power differences and became for me, a key monthly update on the living reality of feminist politics

    Hymen Mystique

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