Why Feminism is AWOL on Islam

afghan women, afghanistan, afghanistan is everywhere, alice walker, and president clinton, anthony daniels, arab news, as gloria steinem, as nelson, as sharon lerner, as vagina monologues, ayatollah khomeini, barbara kingsolver, british muslim, california state university, camp david, christina hoff sommers, clark university, condoleezza rice, cristina posa, cynthia enloe, eve ensler, fadia faqir, fadima sahindal, faezah hashemi, female, feminism, feminism behind, feminist, feminist majority, feminists, ford foundation, foreign policy, gayatri spivak, gender, gender perspectives, gloria steinem, gulf news, gulf war, in saudi arabia, in september, in sweden, international women, islam, islam  u., islamic, islamic arab, j. ann tickner, james miller, jeanne kirkpatrick, jill nelson, joan crawford, kellyanne conway, last december, last february, leila ahmed, lifetime channel, lord cromer, los angeles times, marcy kaptur, margaret thatcher, maternal thinking, maureen dowd, men, michel foucault, middle east women, middle eastern, might, miriam cooke, miss world, most americans, muddassir rizvi, muslim, n. convention, nira yuval, nora marzouk ahmed, north african, old testament, pew research center, polly toynbee, president bush, prince abdullah, public policy program, rima khalaf, roxanne dunbar, sara ruddick, saudi arabia, shifa adnan kodsi, soros open society foundation, susan moller okin, swanee hunt, their own, united arab emirates, united nations, united states, utopian, village voice, wafa idris, war, washington post, western, why feminism, women, world, zahida perveen