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JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EAST WOMEN’S STUDIES
JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EAST WOMEN’S STUDIES
Vol. 3, No. 1 (Winter 2007). © 2007
DISPERSEDNATIONALISM:
War,DiasporaandKurdish
Women’sOrganizing
Shahrzad Mojab and Rachel Gorman
ABSTRACT
In this paper we provide an analysis of Kurdish women’s organizing
in the diaspora, highlighting the tension between “homeland” and
“host-land” nationalisms, patriarchy, and feminism. Tis is the first
feminist-transnational study of the experience of Kurdish women
participating in a modern nation-building process in the Kurdish
region of northern Iraq in the period of 1991–2003. Te study is based
on fieldwork among Kurdish women in Canada, Britain, Sweden,
and Iraqi Kurdistan. We have analyzed the activities of four women’s
organizations in the diaspora and have traced the impact of these
organizations on the events and politics unfolding in the region. We
have also observed and documented the impact of homeland politics on
these diaspora organizations, paying special attention to the gendered
influence exerted by Kurdish political parties. Te theoretical contribu-
tions of this paper are twofold: One, we argue that diaspora should be
understood as a historical rather than only a cultural phenomenon.
Second, diaspora and transnationalism are both historical and politi-
cal categories of social organization which involve a complex of na-
tional, international, and transnational political-economic relations.
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