The rights of women in Iran and the Middle East are always controversial issues. These rights have changed over the centuries, but in reality they have never been compared to men, or nobody actually accepts them. For Iranian women in particular, they have little rights in terms of culture, marriage and other lives. In the next article, I will learn about the daily living of women in the Middle East. During the 1979 Iranian Revolution, the political, social and economic structure of Iran has changed.
Why are these women's appearances so important? What is the record of the women's rights movement (MENA) area in the Middle East and North Africa? Also, how is a MENA woman compared to others? In this brief article I explain in detail the women's rights and equality seeking stage in the Middle East and North Africa and compare the battle and the profit in the West. Until the 19th century, women worldwide enjoyed far less rights than men, but the way to show inequality varies from country to country. For several special times and several special women, women are generally excluded from historical power, are driven to second-class citizens, and give in to men. Women gradually organize and seriously advocate greater rights
Historically, the Middle East has given women more rights than in the West. It includes the right to owning, managing, prosecuting, litigating, contracting, and carrying out business on property. However, family law and inheritance rights have little rights to women in the Middle East. It is ironic that the same Islamic law disadvantages it since the 7th century when women were given the right to oppose norms. In fact, the marriage of children, compliance with responsibilities, difficulties in divorce are part of the daily lives of women in Middle Eastern countries controlled by clergy.
HIST 0540F. Women in the Middle East, July 20 - C: Parent's View, Voice of the Revolution. The course provides a historical approach to women's life, status and concept. It focuses on women in the Middle East from Muslim's 7th century to the 20th century revolution and the struggle for new identity. It explores women's controversial role in society and ways women work in culture. In particular, we discuss the women's life-narrative patterns (themselves and others); women treat the transition from the so-called "traditional" culture to the so-called "modern" Long-term trading "is used. "Social encounter" in the West. FYS WRIT