Saudi Arabia looked for a time in early 2011 as if it too would become swept up in the Arab uprising. Yet it never quite happened--why?
Nigerias 2011 presidential election offered its citizens the most competitive and transparent contest in decades, but also the bloodiest.
Despite the presidential victory of Ollanta Humala, Perus 2011 elections had some continuities with the 2006 contest. The electorate is dividing along regional and socioeconomic rather than partisan lines.
In a runoff between candidates with dubious democratic credentials, former antisystem outsider Ollanta Humala defeated Keiko Fujimori by attracting votes from the middle class.
Though justly vaunted as the worlds largest democracy, India will in all likelihood remain reluctant to take on the mantle of democracy promoter for a mix of historical, ideological, and strategic reasons.
Since its transition to democracy barely a decade ago, Indonesia has begun projecting its newly democratic values across international borders. So far, however, its efforts have been largely rhetorical.
Long an ultrarealist power, Turkey has over the last decade begun taking human rights and democracy more seriously as aspects of its diplomacy, albeit still in a decidedly selective way.
When it comes to backing democracy and human rights in international forums, the behavior of the worlds six most influential rising democracies ranges from sympathetic support to borderline hostility.
Singapore has long been known for combining economic development with strict limits on political opposition. But its 2011 parliamentary elections suggest that it is moving toward competitive authoritarianism.
Gendered barriers to womens advancement in STEM disciplines are subtle, often the result of gender practices, gender stereotypes, and gendered occupational cultures. Professional socialization into scientific cultures encourages and rewards gender practices that help to maintain gendered barriers. This article focuses more specifically on how individual women scientists gender practices poten…
This article explores an aspect of womens transnational labor migration that has been understudied in many labor-sending countries: how men experience shifts in the household labor division triggered by womens migration. In so doing, we shed light on the diverse ways notions of masculinity and gender identities are being reworked and renegotiated in the transnational family. Drawing on qualit…
This paper analyzes how military service can be a source of womens antiwar voices, using the Israeli case of Women Breaking the Silence (WBS). WBS is a collection of testimonies from Israeli women ex-soldiers who have served in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. The WBS testimonies change the nature of womens antiwar protest by offering a new, paradoxical source of symbolic legitimacy fo…
Research on gender inequality has posited the importance of gender discrimination for womens experiences at work. Previous studies have suggested that gender stereotyping and organizational factors may contribute to discrimination. Yet it is not well understood how these elements connect to foster gender discrimination in everyday workplaces. This work contributes to our understanding of these…
Feminist news researchers have long argued that in the macho culture of most newsrooms, journalists daily decisions about what is newsworthy remain firmly based on masculine news values. As such, issues and topics traditionally seen to be particularly relevant to women tend to be pushed to the margins of the news where the implicit assumption is that they are less important than those which in…
Scholarship examining media coverage of social problems largely examines coverage of contentious issues. In this study, I contribute to our understanding of journalist practices by examining coverage of an issue over which there is a US consensus: female genital cutting (FGC). With an analysis of newspaper coverage supplemented by interviews and primary documents, I find that, in contrast to ex…
Although the 2003 Iraq invasion was not wholly framed as a humanitarian intervention, the rhetoric of bringing liberation, democratization and human rights to the Iraqi people was widely advanced by the coalition and supporters as a legitimating reason for war. This article assesses the role played by press photography in legitimizing or challenging this crucial framing during the invasion ac…
Online delivery of content has changed media advertising markets, undermining the business model which has underpinned provision of public media. Three business models have sustained mass media: direct payment for content, payment for advertising and state subsidy, and the author argues, contrary to others claims, that advertising finance has made possible production and provision of high-qu…
While the dimensions of what it means to witness are interrogated within recent scholarship on media witnessing, what it means to bear witness is rarely explained. Bearing witness conceptually organizes what journalism does, and names a subject position for audiences other than voyeurism, but what it means requires clarification. I detail the plasticity of bearing witness within the disco…
The article focuses on a frequently used but under-researched protest medium through which transnational movement networks express their collective demands what are termed here global group petitions (GGPs), and activists themselves call sign-on statements or joint statements. GGPs are online petitions typically framed as global and linking sometimes hundreds of advocacy groups behind…