Fallujah: Superficial treatment of women’s issues - Tunisia
The series Fallujah, Part Two of which was broadcast on Tunisian channel Elhiwar Ettounsi, answers outstanding questions from Part One such as the outcome of the case of the rape...
Sana is a Tunisian journalist and political science researcher who majored in public and political communications from the Political Institute in Tunis. She has published tens of articles about women’s and human rights, corruption and social justice, and has experience drafting policy papers. Sana won the “Bachira Murad” prize organized by the “Friedrich Naumann” foundation and the “African Training Center for Journalists and Communications Professionals” for her article on corruption in Tunisia, and the “Lina Ben Mhenni” prize by the European Union for her article investigating the restriction of the right of single Tunisian women to freeze their eggs. Through her work, Sana is invested in defending women’s rights, gender equality, and social justice.
The series Fallujah, Part Two of which was broadcast on Tunisian channel Elhiwar Ettounsi, answers outstanding questions from Part One such as the outcome of the case of the rape...
In an exclusive interview with Medfeminiswiya, Dr. Fethia Saidi, a sociologist at the University of Tunis and a feminist activist, discusses the sociological and gender contexts of women in war,...
On the steps of the Théâtre municipal in Tunis, one of the oldest historical monuments in the city and one of the most important strongholds for gatherings in support of...
It is no longer surprising that women associate delivery rooms with feelings of terror and fear, not only in relation to the process of childbirth but the potential for humiliation,...
In light of the alarming numbers that confirm the rise in violence against women in Tunisia, especially domestic violence, a state of fear and caution has settled over the feminist...
Although the press sector in Tunisia is known to consist mostly of women, this is not reflected in the number of female journalists in media decision-making positions. And when some...
Two weeks before the publication of my investigative piece, and just one day after Decree 54 was issued, the director of Bolt in Tunisia called me, threatening to sue me...
Feminists in Tunisia are frustrated with the decline in women’s participation in the new parliament, the result of the new electoral law which was introduced by President Kais Saied and...
The government does not support the price of sanitary pads, and considers them as luxury products or even a generous source of tax revenue.
For many Tunisian women, menstruation is no longer just a routine occurrence but has become a trigger of accumulating physical, psychological, and financial strain. As for the state, it offers...
© 2023 Medfeminiswiya - Mediterranean Network for Feminist Information
© 2023 Medfeminiswiya - Mediterranean Network for Feminist Information