Friday, October 29, 2010

What About Afghan Women?


Nicholas D. Kristof asks in a New York Times opinion article if the US intervention in Afghanistan really helps the women there? His conclusion is that the US military involvement in Afghanistan is hurting women more than helping them. He mentions a woman, Aisha, who had her nose and ears cut under the direction of the Taliban from her husband. From reading this, one wonders since the Taliban encourages violent mutilations for women who are deemed "promiscuous" shouldn't the US's stance against the Taliban and a good idea?
Kristof would say no because he doesn't see the US's assistance effective. He mentions a woman, Pari Gol, used to wish the Taliban would be defeated and first encouraged the US's role. However, her husband and daughter were killed in US air strikes, and she is now living in a mud shack. She no longer believes in the US's ability to help, and still hates the Taliban. In this case, the US's involvement not only ruined this woman's life, but it helped spread a negative public opinion of the US that permeates further than this one woman. As well, Kristof makes the point that the culture in Afghanistan, mainly in the South, is what keeps woman restricted not the Taliban. So the US's goal of ridding Afghanistan of the Taliban seems pointless in his mind when the issue goes deeper than the Taliban.
So instead of using US force agains the Taliban, Kristof suggests using aid work that doesn't involve westerner's on the ground to help Afghan women. This idea makes sense to me. In certain regions if one has obvious western aid, that aid will be outright targeted by the Taliban. This is seen by western donors insistence that their be plaques referencing them on the buildings the create. As Kristof says its like putting a sign up that says "burn me down." He mentions micro financing as a good option, specifically the program BPeace that supports women entrepreneurs. This way the woman there are taking charge, and the Taliban are more accepting of this idea. Fatima Akbari has seen great success with collaborating with the Taliban as she has been able to spread her BPeace backed women business classes to Taliban controlled ares. Kristof makes a lot of good points about the ability for westerners to best help in a less obvious manner. What makes me uneasy is his acceptance of working with the Taliban. He said he believed that working with them is a good idea if it furthers woman's goals. I wonder though if working with the Taliban will be an effective long term strategy? They have very strong opinions on how women should act, and yes so maybe in some instances they cave in an allow some rights for woman, but is this just a simple appeasement. Maybe I'm being overly cynical, but I don't have confidence that working with the Taliban is the best option because I just don't believe they will be willing to ever give significantly more power to women. I see where Kristof is coming from, but I worry that he blurs the line too much with his willingness to work with the Taliban, and takes too harsh a stand on the US military intervention in Afghanistan.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Not So Gleeful: What’s Wrong with GQ’s Latest Shoot


The reaction from feminists to the “Glee” themed photo shoot in the newest issue of GQ – a popular men’s magazine – wasn’t exactly surprising. The shot, which was done by infamous photographer Terry Richardson (no stranger to overtly sexual photo shoots and even sexual harassment claims) features three of the main stars of the Fox TV show in borderline pornographic poses. Of course, there has been plenty of uproar that these overtly sexual images are borderline pedophilic due to the fact that these actors (all over 21) portray teenaged characters and cater to a young audience. But in reality there are gender-related issues involved in this shoot other than the purity of our nation’s children and their inability to process sexualized images.




Pictures via Bitch Magazine

1) To Make It As An Actor You Better Strip Down
It seems that in our society, we require our actors to strip down for a provocative photo shoot before we take them “seriously.” You truly haven’t made it in show business until you have removed most of your clothes, and if you haven’t done it for the cameras of a major magazine, then it’s in a leaked video of some kind. Why is it that sexual appeal / blatant sexualization is such an integral part of what we expect from the people we generally consider to be role models in our society? And of course, while men may strip down for underwear or even cologne ads, more often than not stripping down becomes an actual career game-changer for females.

2) Double Standards in the GQ Photo Spread
Setting aside the pedophilic undertones of this shoot, it’s pretty clear that there are gender standards being upheld in every shot. Cory Montieth is smiling (read: looking like a normal person) in every photo, where as Diana Agron and Lea Michele are too busy pouting or bending over to remember how to look like real humans. Also there’s a huge subject v. object issue: Montieth is pictured playing the drums and later holding a baseball bat whereas Lea Michele spreads her legs on a bench in one shot and seductively licks a lollipop in another while Diana Argon straddles Monteith. While Monteith is able to do actual activities, Agron and Michele must look like they’re ready for things to be done to them. Isn’t it problematic that this shoot seems to enforce images of women as sexual objects?

3) What’s Glee All About, Anyway?
Glee professes to be a show not only about “being yourself” but inclusion and diversity. This photo shoot only features the three main straight, white characters, who of course are all thin and conventionally attractive. What message is this shoot trying to send to all the kids who watch Glee because they relate to what they thought were characters representative of a “different” type of person?

Of course, it’s always worth considering the perspective that these actresses are “owning” their sexuality by feeling comfortable enough with their bodies and themselves to post in such a way. However, the organization SPARK (an organization that tries to combat the over-sexualization of women, specifically teen girls, in the media) cites a 2007 American Psychological Task Force Report as finding that there is a correlation between overexposure to sexualized media images of women with depression, eating disorders and risky sexual behavior for girls and demeaning, sexist attitudes in boys. And as filmmaker/writer Jean Kilbourne said at the recent SPARK summit “When the culture offers girls and women only one way to be sexy, it can hardly be considered an authentic choice.”

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

France Arrest Rwandan Over Atrocities In Congo


Just Monday French police officers arrested Callixte Mbarushimana who is believed to be a leader of a movement involved in a recent terrorist campaign in the Kivu region of Congo in which thousands of civilians have been raped and killed. Police were armed with an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court in the Hague stating that he was wanted on charges of war crimes and crimes against humility. According to the court official, Rwandan activities have been tracked for the past 18 months in several countries including France, Germany, Congo and Rwanda. As of now the court must decide whether or not to transfer Mr. Mbarushimana to the international court in the Hague who find Mbarushimana to be a top leader of the Rwandan rebel F.D.L.R. which from it's base in Congo was fighting to gain power in Rwanda and was using crimes against civilians to demonstrate that power.

“In 2009, the F.D.L.R. leadership decided to attack civilians in the North and South Kivu Provinces in order to create a massive humanitarian catastrophe; the F.D.L.R. then tried to blackmail the international community and to extort concessions of power, in exchange for ending the atrocities,” the statement said. “As a result of this deadly blackmail, victims were killed, raped and forcibly displaced, and entire villages were razed to the ground.”

It was Mr. Mbarushimana’s job to conduct an international campaign to convince governments that that the F.D.L.R. was a legitimate political group that had to be reckoned with, an official in the prosecutor’s office said. His arrest was linked to a cycle of violence that took place mostly in 2009. The prosecutor decribed his arrest as "a crucial step in efforts to prosecute the massive sexual crimes" in the Congo being that Mbarushimana's group was linked to several other war crimes resulting in a grand total of more that 500 rapes in multiple places.

We keep hearing about all these different war crimes that seem to be frequent in the DRC. We understand that their country is one that not many people other than them can understanding and really make sense out of. Mbarushimana was living in France at the time of his arrest. How do you feel about other countries butting in on the conflict that is going on? What do you think about the legitimacy of Mbarushimana's arrest?

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/12/world/africa/12congo.html?scp=5&sq=Arrest%20of%20Rebel%20Leader&st=cse

Monday, October 25, 2010

Do Women Make Better Leaders?

Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was the first woman in Africa to be elected as head of state. Knowing this, one imagines she'd have to possess an extremely strong personality and views to get where she is today. There is no doubt that she's had to be a forceful presence. She was even able to beat a soccer star, George Weah, for the presidency in 2005. This article mainly focuses on portraying how the personality of Sirleaf has helped her lead Liberia, and then it broadens out to comment on women's ability to be leaders.
Liberia has a dark past. It was only in 2003 that the 14 year civil war was ended. The article mentions that there are still many empty and destroyed buildings. The UN is still positioned in Liberia with 10,000 men to prevent another surge of violence. It's a country where one of Sirleaf's rivals for her next term is Prince Yormie Johnson, a man who is responsible for one of the recent president's murders.
In such a troubled country having a strong leader is vital, and the article portrays how Sirleaf has seemed to have done that by opening Liberia up for international aid. She recently helped her country receive 4.6 billion dollars worth of relief effort from the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, and a 20 million dollar loan program for Liberian businesses. Her strong personality, one where she isn't afraid to rebuke a bunch of young boys for putting pressure on a rickety old fence, has surely helped her lead Liberia. In addition, she has a had a strong reputation for keeping corruption out of the government. Liberia has been known for it's high level of corruption, so this change is seen universally as extremely positive.
However, she makes some comments that can be seen as highly controversial. She point blank believes women are better leaders. She said that if she could she would put only women on her cabinet. As of now, a quarter of her ministries's leaders are women. She stated, "Women are more committed. Women work harder, and women are more honest; they have less reasons to be corrupt. They don’t have so many diversions. Men have more than one wife; they have their concubines." This seems to touch on a point that has been discussed in class a lot. Is it okay to make blanket statements about women being more effective leaders based on gender generalizations? When looking at her side, it's obvious she has been an effective leader, an effective woman leader. She contributes her strong effective leadership style to surviving an abusive husband. I wonder if there is some grain of truth in the broad generalization she made. It's considered politically incorrect to make those types of blanket statements, but the facts in this situation back her up nicely. It is true that the article ends by commenting that her policy of trying to get new loans, smaller and more manageable, may be unwise due to Liberia's massive debt. However, overall this article focused on the positive benefits of her leadership, and what she is doing seems to me like it has been working decently.
On a related note, this article is about a woman leader in Africa, and since we have been reading "Ruined," I only thought it was appropriate to bring up the setting of the article. I'm wondering if blanket statements about women in leadership positions are more politically acceptable in Africa because of how gender is perceived in that culture being different from our own. Or if not more politically acceptable, at least its maybe easier to see why she would make such a strong statement because of the history of the country. Its not that woman are not responsible for some of the violence, but overall it is rebel groups run and made up of males who do the killing, while woman and children are mainly the victims. I wondered if the history of the country might change how gender is thought of by Liberians. Adding the question of geography I think adds another layer of controversy to Serlieaf's already controversial statements.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/24/magazine/24sirleaf-t.html?_r=1&ref=women


Sunday, October 24, 2010

Gender Roles

After I watched that clip from the OC about gender roles that Lindsay posted, I saw these in the related videos:
 
Gender Roles Reversed

Kids Interviewed about Gender

pretty interesting to watch!

Reserved "Ladies' Coach" In New Delhi

Taken from http://www.hindu.com/2010/10/25/stories/2010102550550100.htm

     Earlier this month, the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation in India introduced the concept of a "ladies" only coach to the New Delhi metro system.  For this experimental endeavor, the DMRC reserved the first out of the four coaches of each train for women, who are said to make up about 25% of the metro travelers. They are allowed to bring on children with them up to 12 years of age, and do not have to put up with the other crowded, cramped coaches, in which people need to push their way out in order to get off at the right stop without being blocked in by the commuters going in at the same time.  Most members of the "fairer sex," as they are referred in more than one article, are in favor of the change, and enjoy having more room, less crowding, and an easier time getting on and off without the mad-house pushing and shoving to get on and off the train.  Men, of course, are not happy about it, and say that there is even more crowding on the other coaches now than there was before, and barely even have much breathing space in the cramped area.  Some men have been getting onto the "ladies-only coach" despite the new rule, either because they are illiterate and cannot read the signs, or because there is simply not enough room on the remaining three coaches.  The DMRC has now stated that a fine will be issued to any men who attempt to ride the women's coach, and there will be personnel stationed at the entrances of the reserved coaches to ensure that men do not try to enter. 
     As I searched for articles about gender across the world from us, this really stuck out to me.  In all the articles I found about the policy I could not find any stated reason for exactly why the new rule was created, whether it be for safety, for general comfort of female commuters, or for some other reason.  I can imagine viewpoints that would see this as both a good thing for the women if they are able to ride more comfortably without worrying about being pushed around in the crowded coaches, a bad thing for the women because it reinforces the idea that the "fairer sex" needs to be protected from the aspects of life that tough men can handle, and, of course, a bad thing for men who now need to ride through even worse conditions than existed on the trains before the ladies' coach was created.  What do you think are the pros and cons of this change, and what do you think wins out?  Is the ladies' coach is a good idea for New Delhi, or not?

http://sify.com/news/ladies-coach-on-metro-women-are-happy-men-are-not-news-national-kkeuafgjaad.html

http://www.hindustantimes.com/Women-fume-as-men-ride-Metro-s-ladies-coaches/Article1-608887.aspx

http://sify.com/news/thumbs-up-for-metro-s-ladies-coach-news-national-kkdqOciifee.html

http://www.hindu.com/2010/10/25/stories/2010102550550100.htm

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/Metro--Men-in-women-s-coaches-to-be-fined-Rs-200/701957

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Ugh I'm embarrassed to be as addicted to this show as I am, but talk about reverse gender roles.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R213hS7ekF4&feature=related

In Sumo's Push for the Olympics, a Turn Away From Tradition


As described in a New York Times article by Daniel Krieger, women’s sumo wrestling has recently become more popular. This all started in 1994 when the International Olympic Committee created a rule which excluded single sex sports from the Olympic Games. Men sumo wrestlers had been fighting for years to make sumo wrestling an Olympic sport, so they didn’t want to just give up. For that reason, sumo wrestling organizations worked very hard to popularize female sumo wrestling. Stephen Gadd, the general secretary for the European Sumo Union was especially involved in this movement.
Two years later, the first women’s sumo wrestling tournament was held in Europe and the sport started to become more acceptable for women in Europe. However, they did have several challenges. Their biggest challenge was attempting to get rid of the negative connotation associated with female wrestling. This stigma originated in the 18th century when topless women would wrestle blind men for the entertainment of other men. Also, in previous years, women were not even allowed to touch or go inside of the wrestling ring because they would make it impure. And on top of all of this, many women just thought that sumo wrestling should not be a female sport. Gadd explained, “In the professional sumo world, women in sumo is as unthinkable as a rabbi sponsoring a pork farm.”
Despite all of these challenges, female sumo wrestling somehow started to attract followers. One successful female sumo wrestler, Yuka Ueta commented, “Normal-size people can do any sports they like, but someone who is heavy doesn’t have many options. Sumo is perfect for this kind of woman. And if she has a complex about her body, that will change with sumo.” Ueta is not the only female who has a love for this sport. Women’s sumo wrestling has become very prominent in Japan and several European countries. Because of this recent popularization, Gadd hopes that if the 2020 Olymic Games could be held in Japan, they might be able to finally make sumo wrestling an Olympic sport.
It is great that this sport is now an equal opportunity sport for both men and women. But when looking at the event, it seems that the only reason female sumo wrestling became prominent was because men's sumo wrestling was being hindered. If the Olympic Committee did not make that law would their tradition have eventually changed? Should we follow this example to come closer to gender equality in other aspects of life?


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/19/sports/19iht-SUMO.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&sq=sumo wrestling&st=cse&scp=2

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Conflict Minerals - Julie & Hannah

Conflict Minerals in the Congo

The conflict in the Congo is one with many complex and interconnected sources, and as outsiders looking in it can be hard to determine what problems to attack in order to ultimately help end the war. However, there is one source of the conflict that may be easier to attack, and is disconcertingly related to our own lives. Conflict minerals, or minerals such as tin, tungsten, tantalum and coltan (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conflict_minerals) are minerals that are very difficult to find in other geographical areas, yet are plentiful in the Congo. They are a huge source of revenue, and much of the rebel groups in the Congo’s fighting can be traced back to desire of control of the mines. But in order to control these mines, these militia groups resort to murder and rape with devastating frequency. Also, these minerals also found in electronic devices like digital cameras, cell phones, lap tops and other devices we use every day (http://articles.latimes.com/2010/jul/26/opinion/la-ed-congo-20100726).

These minerals have had a devastating effect on the conflict in the Congo. The conflict minerals cause a vicious cycle. Rebel groups in control of the mines, and therefore the mineral trade, exact bribes and/or taxes, and draw the majority of their profit primarily from member states of the European Union. The money raised is then used to buy weapons for the rebel groups, which are in turn used to commit atrocities against millions of innocent people, including “mass murder, rape, torture and forced recruitment.” (http://www.globalissues.org/news/2010/03/04/4732) Without the conflict mineral trade, the rebel groups would be less-well armed and generally less supported monetarily, making all of their actions far more difficult to execute.
Currently, selling coltan is not illegal and it is an industry that produces about $6 billion in revenue per year (http://www.globalissues.org/article/442/guns-money-and-cell-phones). The United States has taken steps towards stopping this trade – over the summer, Obama signed legislation that would require U.S. companies to disclose whether or not their products contain conflict minerals (http://articles.latimes.com/2010/jul/26/opinion/la-ed-congo-20100726). However, this industry is still incredibly overbearing and a major source of the conflict.

The Ongoing Issue of Rape in the DRC: Sara and Alex

Amidst all of the ongoing conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, one of the most widely utilized forms of violence is rape. With an enormous number of rape crimes, the lives of the Congolese women are constantly threatened and mistreated. This sexual violence is an extremely common tactic in the unending warfare, for there are many ways in which it can potentially weaken the enemy. "Rape has been a war tactic in recent years here, a way for armed groups to tear apart communities, destroy villages and flush families from their land." The soldiers tend to use the local women as sexual replacements of their wives while they are away, and those women who survive the crime are often ostracized from their husbands and their community. Through familial tension and shame, rape crimes have the capability to weaken the ties within a community.

Cases of mass rape not only implement social issues; they also severely impair the health of the victimized community. The spread of HIV/AIDS is extremely damaging to an entire region in the long run, and the lasting effect of spreading a disease goes hand-in-hand with the effect of injury. Rossette Kavira, a gynecologist at a hospital in the town of Goma, states that "almost all victims require surgery due to bleeding or wounds inflicted through torture by their attackers." Yet since there are so many rape victims, women often wait months before they are able to receive any form of treatment. These horriffic acts of sexual violence can tear apart any strength that the community may have previously had.

Yet why is rape so unbearably common in the Democratic Republic of Congo? It is a weapon that is more readily available and the cheapest of any weapon used in the past, such as bombs and bullets. According to a recent report involving approximately 750 victims, "most of the women (87 percent) were raped during the day. The rest were raped at night." There are very few times when the women can feel safe and not threatened by the ongoing rape crimes, for the act is so common and has such demoralizing effects on Congolese communities.

http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news/article.cfm?id=1836
http://africa-reports.blogspot.com/2010/10/democratic-republic-of-congo-background.html
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/3953747.stm
http://crs.org/democratic-republic-of-congo/rape-counseling/

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Other War Crimes
Some Rebel Factions and their Relation to War Crimes
GOVERNMENT SANCTIONED ARMY
Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (FARDC)
-the official government army
- National Army Chief of Staff - Charles Mwando
REBELS
National Congress for the Defense of the People (CNDP)- led by renegade general Laurent Nkunda
- Former General in Armed Forces of DRC – became rebel warlord in what he called attempt to protect his fellow Tutsis
o accused of murder, pillaging, abduction of children as soldiers
o involved in massacres of civilians in 2002 and 2004
- - General Bosco Ntaganda worked with Nkunda
- - Created a splinter faction in 2009
- - Was arrested in 2010 for supposed:
o Assassination of 8
o Arbitrary arrest of 7
o Abduction and disappearances of several others
Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR)
  • also active in the DRC
  • created in September 2000 with the ideals of Hutu power and opposing Tutsi influence
  • many arrested in 2009 for war crimes
o including rape, forced recruitment of child soldiers, and attacking civilians
-their president, Ignace Murwanashyaka, and executive secretary, Callixte Mbarushimana are well-educated men who are defended by many Europeans, including the French government
-mostly the evidence is testimony of former generals, so it is hard to prove anything
Mai Mai
  • community based militia grew out of the 2nd congo war
  • used local tradition to inspire themselves
  • loose association of mai mai groups across the DRC – headed by tribal leaders, village leaders
  • General Didier Bakti is one of the militia leaders of the organized Mai Mai that terrorized eastern Congo in 2008
  • - They fought the gov., the rebels, and the United Nations
-in 2009, many members were tried in the International Criminal Court
o found guilty of crimes against humanity including terrorism and insurgency, due to involvement in rape, executions, and other war crimes
o the court also held the government of the DRC responsible for not disarming the Mai Mai
Lord’s Resistance Army
  • rebel group based in Uganda led by Joseph Kony
  • With a doctrine of intense Christianity, traditional African religions, and mysticism, this group speaks of establishing a theocratic state
  • Accused of many human rights violations: murder, abduction, sexual enslavement, mutilation, conscription of children
Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo (ADFLC)
  • helped coordinate ousting of first leader President Mobutu for new President Kabila
  • -fell apart, marking the beginning of the second war
  • -forcibly recruited thousands of children
  • -according to accounts of children who escaped the army
o they are often taken in raids on schools
o witnessed pillaging of Kirungu village, deaths of thousands of unarmed commandos
o have two to three weeks basic training, then are sent out, some without guns or anything to defend themselves
o they would sometimes steal children’s clothing to discourage them from escaping, and beaten and torture if they attempt escape
o A Rwandan Colonel described the army as “made up of youngsters, obedient and disciplined, but who needed to be better supervised, better trained”
Front National Liberation of the Congo (FNLC)
  • -active in the 1970’s
  • -sparked 2 international wars by invading Shaba Zaïre
Congolese Rally for Democracy (RCD- Goma)
  • -ally of ADFLC
  • -particularly associated with recent child recruitment, though this is a common practice across militias, armies, and factions
  • -claims to have “inherited” the child soldiers from the ADFLC
  • o it is estimated that 15-30% of ALL new Congolese recruits are less than 18 years old, and many are less than 12

Egyptian Women Blame Lebanese Murder Victim




For Egyptians, Lebanese Pop Star's Murder Was Her Own Fault

Al-Shorfa article

Last month, a new development occurred in the case involving a prominent Egyptian real estate executive, who in 2008 allegedly paid $2 million to have his Lebanese pop star lover killed. Initially the wealthy Egyptian, Hisham Talaat Moustafa, had been sentenced to death, but after an appeal his was punishment was reduced to 15 years in prison. Many Egyptians, including women, were outraged that Moustafa was getting off so easy, but not because of the nature of his crime. They simply felt that his appeal was an abuse of wealth and power to undermine the criminal justice system. When asked if they felt sympathy for the 30-year-old Suzanne Tamim, whose throat was slit in her apartment, most said no.

It is a cultural belief in the Middle East that if a man harms a woman, she must have done something to deserve it. Tamim, as a popular musician, was often pictured in magazines or on television scantily clad or posing provocatively. Rima Sabban, a sociologist from the UAE explains, “We are very judgmental, we forgot the crime, and we remember how she dresses.” Tamim’s modern, Westernized clothing made it hard for Arab women to relate to her, and incite their disapproval. Yet both Tamim and Moustafa had been through multiple marriages, and Moustafa even had two wives simultaneously. He was married and had three children during his affair with Tamim. When he is criticized, it is about matters of wealth and justice, not morality.

This disconnect stems from the same attitude that leads to honor killings. Women in Middle Eastern countries are typically held to a higher standard of moral and sexual purity than their male counterparts, and are judged more harshly for failing to meet these standards. A commenter on Al-Shorfa, a Middle Eastern news website, wrote, “I think that Hisham should not be executed for the sake of such an immoral woman.” Likewise, one of the women interviewed, Soha Hassouna, said, “I’m glad this happened so she can be an example to our children.” Personally, I find this attitude almost as sickening as the crime itself. Though I am uncertain how I feel about the death penalty, I don’t think 15 years is nearly long enough for Moustafa, especially if he is able to appeal again and reduce the sentence even more. He had a woman killed for expressing herself and making her own choices, and I see nothing about his actions that can be justified.

International NGO Support: Danielle Mostow

International aid towards the Democratic Republic of Congo is generally focused on spreading awareness and funding local projects in DR of Congo. Overall, there were not too many organizations out to help the DR of Congo. Three prominent aid groups were Women for Women, Foundation Maisha, and Falling Whistles. The organizations focus on women, children, and child soldiers.
Falling Whistles deals primarily with child soldiers and awareness of the people fighting in the DR of Congo. The organization sells whistles because that is the only warning that the child soldiers get before their enemies attack. The money they receive goes to help former child soldiers recover.
Foundation Maisha also deals with children by helping them get off the street. All of the violence in the DR of Congo has left many children poor and along. Foundation Maisha gives them a chance to go to school to enhance their future.
Women for Women helps the many women who have been effected by the war. They help with rape victims and improve their economic standing and their confidence. Much of the money donated is used for food, clothing, and medical expenses.
These organizations seem to be helping the survivors of problems more than they can help people currently in the action. They are working as relief efforts to try to help the people who have been harmed.

Political History of the DRC: Cecile and Abi

King Leopold II of Belgium began colonizing the DRC in 1877. From the beginning, the area was fraught by violence because the colonel rulers forced the natives to work in the mineral mines. The used torture and execution to further their economic gains. However, Belgian rule also allowed for the education of many of the native DRC inhabitants. In 1960 the DRC became independent of Belgian at the Brussels Round Table Conference. Joseph Kasavudu was elected the president, and Patrice Lumumba was elected the prime minister.
Sadly, violence erupted between the DRC native factions and the Belgians only five days after the elections, and the UN was asked to intervene. When the UN did not act quickly enough, Lumumba asked the USSR to give him weapons to suppress the violence that threatened his government. The US soon intervened under the guise of protecting the world against communism, though its real interest was in the mineral wealth of the region. They backed the rebel leader, Mobutu, who with the US’s aid, came to power.
Once Mobutu was in power, he quickly centralized his authority so that he was elected president unopposed in 1970. He focused on the country’s cultural history, renaming it the Republic of Zaire. After a few years of relative stability, however, Katangan rebels began staging attacks from Angola and were driven out with help from Belgian paratroopers. In the 1980s, Mobutu held on to his position, and his treatment of various political opposition groups drew international criticism.
As the Cold War came to an end in 1990, Mobutu faced increasing international pressure as well as domestic protests and a weakened economy. He agreed in principle to a democratization of Zaire’s political system, but a reform package was delayed. In the fall of 1991, Zaire’s soldiers began to loot the capital as a protest because their wages had not been paid, and Belgian and French troops evacuated the 20,000 foreigners living in Kinasha.
In 1994, as the Rwandan genocide raged, Rwandan Hutu militias began to use refugee camps in Zaire as bases for attacks into Rwanda. Mobutu was ousted in 1997 by the combination of Rwandan troops and a domestic, armed coalition led by Laurent-Desire Kabila. Kabila took over and renamed the country the Democratic Republic of Congo. However, his relationship with his foreign backers deteriorated, and Rwandan and Ugandan troops entered the DRC with the intention of taking Kabila down. Instead, a coalition of Angolan, Zimbabwean, and Namibian troops protected the existing government.
By 1999, foreign military influences were such that the DRC was essentially divided into three segments: the east, controlled by Rwanda, the Ugandan north, with the rest under Kabila’s control. A July 1999 ceasefire and subsequent peace accords promised dialogue and a transitional government, but all parties failed to live up to the agreements. Meanwhile, the international community was increasingly criticizing Kabila for blocking UN peacekeeping troops and restraining movements towards democracy.
In early 2001, Laurent Kabila was assassinated and was succeeded by his son Joseph Kabila, who proceeded to undo many of his father’s anti-democratic policies. Talks attempting to set up a transitional government that would set up elections began in fall 2001 and lasted on and off until April 2003, when they finally succeeded. Joseph Kabila, as president of the transitional government, did make some economic and political progress, but human rights violations remained.
In May of 2005 a constitution was put before the national assembly, and was ratified in January of 2006. The new constitution allowed for the first democratic elections in the DRC since 1970 to take place on July 30th, 2006. However, this great accomplishment was marred by the outbreak of factional fighting when President Kabila received less than 50 votes. Though he was the one with the highest percentage, many groups claimed the right to power. In an October runoff election, Kabila was officially made president.
This government was not stable for long, as the rebel leader Laurent Nkunda led his rebel tribe, comprised of mainly Tutsis, against the Congolese Army in 2007. Nkunda justified his actions by proclaiming he was protecting the Tutsis against the Rwandan Hutus. In 2008 a brief cease-fire quickly collapsed and Nkunda made substantial progress in taking over the DRC. Just before taking Goma, the capital of the Kivu province, there was another cease-fire issued. The UN then got involved with several other African leaders to create more substantial peace pacts.
Sadly in 2009, the Hutu militia remerged and prompted thousands to flee their homes and violence erupted again. Kabila tried to keep peace an option by giving amnesty to armed groups. The violence continued into 2010 when civil rights activist Floribert Chebeya was found dead after being asked to visit the police. The UN is planning a withdrawal from the DRC after much international criticism. Despite the continued violence, the democratic process has been able to continue. The DRC is now preparing for the 2011 elections.

International Involvement: Moriah and Lindsay

The United Nations has made an effort to pass resolutions regarding peace in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. These efforts however, have not made positive change in the Congo. Rather, they have only condemned the conflict. While these resolutions work in theory, the United Nations has no power to intervene. For example, UN Peacekeepers are generally stationed in an area and have guns, but are not allowed to shoot, and so do not have an effective way to defend civilians in conflict. In addition, the UN does not have the power to require its member countries to send any of their own forces to intervene, and UN resolutions are not required to be enforced as law in the countries about which the resolutions are written. For these reasons, UN involvement has been largely ineffective, often giving a statement but enacting no real change.

Rwandan conflict in the Congo among Hutu and Tutsi which began after the end of the Rwandan Genocide is also inflaming tension and animosity among all warring groups there. Beginning with an overthrow of the Congolese government and then a change of sides among formerly allied groups, Rwandan involvement in Congo has simply increased armed conflict throughout the troubled nation.




http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Mission_in_the_Democratic_Republic_of_Congo#2009

http://www.un.org/en/peacekeeping/missions/monuc/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democratic_Republic_of_the_Congo#Rwandan.2FUgandan_Invasions_and_Civil_Wars

"Boys Will Be Girls" - from Lindsay

Monday, October 18, 2010

Congo Ethnic Groups: Erica and Elissa

Language
The official language of the Congo is French, although 242 languages are spoken among the tribes throughout the country. Of those 242 only Kikongo, Lingala, Tshiluba, and Swahili are nationally recognized.

Religion
90% of the population of the Congo is Christian primarily Roman Catholic and Protestant. The remainder of the population is Muslim, Kimbanguist, or another religion.

Ethnic Groups
There are four major ethnic groups in the Congo - Mongo, Luba, Kongo (all Bantu), and the Mangbetu-Azande (Hamitic) making up 45% of the population, however there are over 200 other ethnic tribes.
There are also 60,000 Belgians. The ancestors of this population were the Belgians who used to control the country before the country gained Independence.
The status of women is very low in the social culture of the Congo. Women are underrepresented in leadership positions as well as in law.

Demographics
At birth there are 1.03 males for every female born.
0-14 makes up 46.9% of the population
15-64 makes up 50.6% of the population
65- and up makes up 2.5% of the population
The life expectancy is about 54 years which is clearly indicated by the small percentage of the population who are over 65.

http://www.everyculture.com/Bo-Co/Democratic-Republic-of-the-Congo.html

http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Democratic_Republic_of_Congo#Status_of_women
http://www.fco.gov.uk/en/travel-and-living-abroad/travel-advice-by-country/country-profile/sub-saharan-africa/congo-democratic-republic

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democratic_Republic_of_the_Congo#Early_history

Sunday, October 17, 2010

ESPN Slowly Introducing Online Brand for Women


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/16/sports/16espnw.html?ref=women

Katie Thomas

Over the years, ESPN has defined itself as the "worldwide leader in sports," providing countless stories and tremendous coverage for its die-hard sports fans. The network seeks to interest all sorts of audiences, and it does a fantastic job of targeting those viewers, yet one specific group seems to be left out of the loop: women. Because gender equality continues to expand as a current issue in our global society, ESPN felt obliged to form a new brand marketed specifically to women. The soon-to-appear digital program, espnW, is presently a low-key blog, having pages on both Twitter and Facebook, but it is expected to grow by spring of 2011. So far, many female athletes are ecstatic about the change in direction in news media coverage, and ESPN seems to be making a promising commitment towards establishing espnW as a successful addition to the network. Yet changes come with an assortment of reactions, and many females in the sports field oppose the idea of this new program.

Although the publicity is encouraging to female athletes, the idea of a separate and new program for audiences who hold an interest in female athletics can be patronizing and marginalizing. Laura Gentile, the vice president of the upcoming espnW, described the program as "where we talk about women finding self-esteem in sports and about getting a pedicure." Yet aside from that comment, she claims the main purpose is to discuss female sports, (a little more than they are already discussed in today's sports news,) and to add that attention to the popular male sports topics. This seems to be an easy solution to the lack of publicity that women get on ESPN; the everpopular program only devoted around 8% of its program to women's sports. But would this addition of espnW give ESPN the freedom to drop women's sports from its program as a whole, or would it lead to a greater coverage of the neglected topic on ESPN?

What exactly does this mean for the future of female sports? I think we all can agree that we don't hear much about female athletes in comparison to those NFL quarterbacks and the drama caused by LeBron James. But is the establishment of a new program dedicated to women the approach we should take? Does this lead to gender equality under publicity, or does it just further the gender separation because women need their own program?

Sara Huser

Friday, October 15, 2010

Geography and Natural Resources of The Congo

StephanieHarris and Maya Sirmons
Located in Central Africa, the Democratic Republic of Congo has a estimated population of 60,085,804. It is slightly less than 1/4 the size of the United States, with their land totalling to 2,345,410 sq km, 77,810 sq km being water. The Congo is three times the size on Pennsylvania and it surrounded by Gabon, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, and the Angola exclave of Cabinda, with a short stretch of coast on the South Atlantic. Of that vast amount of land only 2.96% is arable meaning the other 96.25 % is not farmable. In result, issues such as wildlife population, water pollution, deforestation, soil erosion, and wildlife poaching. Along with the small amount of land that is arable, there are periodic droughts which are natural hazards to the crops and which becomes a huge problem for the people of Congo. The Democratic of Congo is also landlocked, which means that they are shut in by land completely and they have no direct access to the sea or water for that matter.
Aside from the environmental issues in the Congo they possess a limited number of natural resources which include gold, cassiterite (tin ore), wolframite (tungsten ore), methane, hydropower, and arable land. As of today the Congo continues to develop their natural resources while also attempting to discover new ways to improve their environment.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010


Danielle found this!

Hey Baby: A Violent Video Game Geared to Women



An article was recently published in Time Magazine regarding anew video game that was released in June, titled "Hey Baby." In this video game, women are approached by men that blurt out random pick-up lines. Some of these lines are as seemingly innocent as, "Hey, how you doin'?" or, "Hey sweetheart." However, they can also be as raunchy as "I want to lick you all over." After hearing these comments it is the female player's decision whether or not she wants to shoot the male offender. This type of video game is not more violent than other video games on the market but it has recieved criticism from both males and females. In response, the creator of this game, Suyin Looui, commented that this violence was supposed to be humorous. She said this game was a, "space to act out their ridiculous revenge fantasies...and have a good laugh about it." When Louii created this game, it seems fairly obvious that it was intended for the female market. And this seems to be for good reasons. According to recent studies 40% of gamers are female. Therefore, video game creators have to keep women's desires in mind when creating their games if they want to be successful. If this game is what sells, is this still a buisness action that we can condone, or does this go too far?


The author of this article also points out the reversed gender roles. Often times in video games, men are the heroes, or they are at least heavily involved in the action. However, in this video game women are the people with the guns and the power. In the hope of eventually eliminating specific gender roles, is it ok to temporarily reverse the roles to get either revenge or equality?


http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,2024265,00.html



Tuesday, October 12, 2010

P.S. Here's a funny and somewhat-related video!

Wait -- Men Suffer from Gender Inequality, Too??

Taken from article, http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/20/weekinreview/20parkerpope.html?ref=men
NYTimes - Now, Dad Feels as Stressed as Mom
By TARA PARKER-POPE
Published: June 19, 2010

     In response to some new studies on parental stress, one New York Times author comments on the expectations of heterosexual parents based on gender. As society (and mothers) begin to expect fathers to devote more time to the home, they are beginning to have trouble finding the family-work equilibrium that mothers have been trying to perfect for decades. Joan C. Williams explains that "This is a pretty sensitive indicator of the rise of the new ideal of the good father as a nurturing father, not just a provider father." Despite this new standard, men are generally not allowed as much time off of work as women when it comes to their kids, even though they want to be involved with their children more than ever. They can not take nearly as much leave as mothers can after having a baby, except for a few choice countries such as Iceland in which they receive only a third of the time off as their female counterparts. Even as men begin to take on more responsibilities at home, many studies show that things that a man might see as household work are often not taken into account when his wife mentally calculates his contribution. Men do not have as much experience or as many role models in this new-found world of male parenting and housekeeping, and so are struggling to keep up and meet expectations.
     After centuries of women's struggles to make their way into a world of work and business which has traditionally been dominated by men, at what point is it time for men to begin forging their way into traditional female territory? Do you think it will be as difficult for men to step into the household as it has been for women to do the reverse, and do you think that it is as important to fight for a man's right to be a part of his family as it is to fight for a woman's right to be a part of the workplace?

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Syndromes and Handmaid's Tale

We've mentioned several psychological syndromes and experiments that are relevant to our study of Handmaid's Tale. In case any of you want to follow up, I thought I'd include some links here.

FBI website about understanding Stockholm Syndrome (where a captive or prisoner begins to empathize with the captor)

The Stanford Prison Experiment, which we discussed in class, a troubling reflection on the effect of being a prisoner or a guard on one's behavior.

The Kitty Genovese Syndrome, more commonly known as the "Bystander effect," named (well, the first name is named) after the murder of Kitty Genovese in 1964. An article questioning it is worth a look as well.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Fair Pay Isn't Always Equal Pay... Right?

The Senate is considering on a bill that would make it easier for women to sue their employers for wage discrimination on the basis of sex. While the bill has received support from women’s organizations and President Obama, who referred to it as “a common-sense bill,” the author of this article (a woman) was not so sure that the bill was a good idea. Essentially, the author argued that though women currently earn 77 cents for every dollar that men earn, this statistic ignores other factors determining salary. Historically speaking, men are likely to have had stronger educational experiences than their female counterparts if they were educated more than about 30 or 40 years ago. Similarly, they might have more experience and tenure simply because their field has been open to them longer than it has been open to women. Interestingly, “young, childless, single urban women earn up to 8% more than their male counterparts,” according to a recent survey. The gap, the author says, is shrinking to the point of disappearing.

Meanwhile, the bill would “hold employers liable for the ‘lingering effects of past discrimination’ – ‘pay disparities’ that have been ‘spread and perpetuated through commerce.’” Therefore, employers would not only have to ensure that it was not intentionally discriminating against women, but also to monitor potentially sexist suppositions behind the way the market drives wages, which may or may not be sexist. Employers, faced with millions of dollars of damages and bad publicity, would be likely to settle even if they were entirely innocent. The article concluded with the following two sentences:

“The Paycheck Fairness bill would set women against men, empower trial lawyers and activists, perpetuate falsehoods about the status of women in the workplace and create havoc in a precarious job market. It is 1970s-style gender-war feminism for a society that should be celebrating its success in substantially, if not yet completely, overcoming sex-based workplace discrimination.”

Now, I don’t buy that wage discrimination has disappeared. I think that by the time I’m in a position to hire other people, it may have been effectively eliminated because my generation has grown up in a climate where discrimination is seen as a great moral wrong (which, in many ways, it is). I am also aware that, at least in the U.S., most college campuses have more women than men, suggesting that the education factor may slide the other way. In 50 years, could we be looking at a market that discriminates against men?

Again, I doubt it, but debate on the subject of what, if any, wage discrimination is occurring is crucial. As a female, I would like to be paid on the basis of my credentials and my relative productivity, not on the basis of my sex. But the line is blurrier than it at first might seem. No one would argue that discrimination isn’t occurring when two individuals whose only difference is their sex are paid two different salaries. Of course, since no two individuals are identical, the situation is never this clear-cut.

The question I pose, then, is at what point do we do as the author of this article suggests and move on? At what point have we succeeded in “overcoming sex-based workplace discrimination,” and when do we stop legislating against it? What does it even mean to have succeeded in overcoming it?

The Meaning of "Man Up"



Last month after being accused of pummeling his father in law Carlos Pena, major league baseball player Francisco Rodriguez of the New York Mets also known as K-Rod was arrested and charged with third degree assault charges. While he was placed on the restricted list for two games, he later rejoined the team after issuing a public apology. After continuing to play Rodriguez later reported pain in his thumb which happened to be the result of a torn ligament. Considering the reasons behind Rodriquez's injury and his previous record of explosive behavior the Mets decided to make his contract for the year 2012 non-guranteed while also not playing him for the remainder of the season while his thumb was in recovery.
So what does all this have to do with the phrase 'man up'? Some say the Mets lost K-Rod to a season ending surgery but others say they lost him to this phrase 'man up' which is said to be the sprak in the altercation between K-Rod and Carlos Pena. While 'man up" may have served as the spark to a fight this phrase has taken on many meanings throughout American culture today. The media is spreading the manly message to young male consumers. Things like the web site for 'The No Fear Energy Drink' smacks 'Man Up' right across the screen while other advertisements such as the commercial for Miller Lite features a voice over saying, 'Man up, beacuse if you're drinking a light beer without great pilsner taste, you're missing the point of drinking beer'. It is said that light beer ads such as Miller Lite often amp up the masculinity possibly to compensate for their watered down product.
While 'Man Up' may be used as a means of advertisements is also comes with that spectrum of meaning as I stated before. It could mean 'Don't be a sissy, toughen up' or 'Do the right thing, be a man'. While these may be considered negative ways of using the phrase they aren't all negative. The Man Up Campaign for example, is a new global initiative that engages youth to stop gender based violence. Their mission statement reads, "Our call to action challenges each of us to 'Man Up' and declare that violence against women and girls must end".
Brian Zimmer, the author of this article states that long ago 'man up' was simply an alternative to the verb 'man' meaning to supply with adequate manpower. He also talks of how the phrase rooted from sports to begin with. In football 'man up' simply meant man to man defense or in rodeo terms it just meant get tough. All in all 'man up' was the idea of resilience in the face of adversity. Have we taken the phrase 'man up' to far? Do you think this phrase has had more of a positive or negative impact on our society if any impact at all? Why?

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/05/magazine/05FOB-onlanguage-t.html?_r=1&ref=francisco_rodriguez

http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/r/francisco_rodriguez/index.html?scp=10&sq=masculinity&st=cse

Monday, October 4, 2010

Hasbro's Rose Petal Cottage

Gotta love teaching little girls to be housewives beginning at age 4.

Editorial note from JAG: I took the liberty of embedding the video instead of just including the link, as Lindsay originally did.



Target Women: Birth Control

As you slave away studying for your math tests, take a break at some point and watch this Sarah Haskins video from the "Target: Women" series, about birth control. I promise, it's funny.



If you like it, check out some of the rest of the Target: Women series here. I can't resist posting the Yogurt video here as well, which I also love.

Enjoy! Go back to studying now!

Girls Kissing Girls: Explaining the Trend

Jeffrey Kluger
September 15, 2010

http://healthland.time.com/2010/09/15/girls-kissing-girls-whats-up-with-that/

The article I chose from Time Magazine discusses the growing trend in sexual activity between girls. Jeffrey Kluger writes about how although girl-girl kissing has never been terribly uncommon, girls today are much more open about sexual experimentation with each other. This is not referring to an increase in homosexuality as much as it's pinpointing the increased need for sexual attention. A female student interviewed by a professor commented: "It's usually brought on by, I don't know, like shots or drinking or people kind of saying something to like cheer it on or whatever...And it's usually done in order to turn guys on or to seek male attention in some way." This student's reasoning seems to be the main instigator behind the experimentation, which is mainly to impress those of the opposite sex.

With this rationale, professor Verta Taylor (University of California) and her colleague, Leila J. Rupp, mention how this experimentation can further the imbalance in power between genders; because females are emphasizing their role as "the observed," they allow men to remain in the "socially dominant position." Girls tend to perform the action due to peer pressure and male request, often in the form of threesomes. Yet there are instances in which girls use this upward tend in same-sex physical activity as a method for revealing their sexual orientation: "For other girls -- those on their way to coming out as lesbians, or just discovering their orientation themselves -- girl-girl kissing... provides a safe and comfortable glide path in what can often by a rocky transition." Because girl-girl kissing is becoming more socially acceptable, homosexuality seems to be less of a taboo.

Many students and researchers are calling this "heteroflexibility" a social improvement; they belive toleration for homosexual activity makes it easier and more comforting for individuals to reveal their sexual orientation. But does this tolerance actually make it easier for those individuals? Because this experimentation is increasing, it can downplay the meaning because the intentions are askew. When many girls are participating in "girl-girl kissing" to attract attention from males, it can make it difficult for homosexuals to reveal their orientation when the other participant has a different objective. It can even portray homosexuality as a joke because many girls don't take the act seriously. Are we really facing an improvement in toleration for homosexual activity, or is society beginning to consider it an act of ridicule?

Sara Huser