Bienvenid@s

"Otro requisito obligatorio es que la historia (y cultura) de África debería ser al menos

vista desde dentro, no se mide por las normas de valores extraños ... Sin embargo, estas conexiones

tiene que ser analizadas en términos de intercambios e influencias multilaterales en que algo sea oído de la contribución africana al desarrollo de la humanidad. " J. Ki-Zerbo, Historia General de África, vol. I, p. LII.

Quienes somos: grupo de investigación de la Universidad de Granada, coordinado por la doctora Africanista Soledad Vieitez. AFRICAInEs se institucionaliza como grupo andaluz de investigación en 2009, aunque el trabajo comenzó algunos años antes al objeto de ofrecer investigación aplicada al desarrollo y la cooperación a través de investigaciones rigurosas en forma de estudios cualitativos de campo de media a larga duración y/o tesis doctorales en Antropología Social, especialmente, aunque no exclusivamente, sobre África. La idea además era producir estudios diagnósticos de utilidad para intervención social que tuviera en cuenta la complejidad y la diversidad cultural, social, económica y/o política. Las principales líneas de investigación son, a saber: Conceptos, discursos, percepciones y prácticas del desarrollo (local y global) y cooperación para el desarrollo (autonómica, nacional e internacional); Estudios de las mujeres y de género, en particular, en su relación con la economía y el desarrollo, aunque no exclusivamente en dicho ámbito; Migraciones, desarrollo y cooperación; Movimientos sociales y de mujeres en África y Asia, así como resistencias y movimientos ciudadanos en España o en el mundo; Medios de comunicación desde la Antropología, en particular, la producción africana de medios y representaciones propias; Culturas, desarrollo, mujeres y género; Salud, cuerpo, mujeres y reproducción; Estrategias de integración de comunidades y personas en la diáspora; Alternativas «sur‐sur» y/o desarrollos de base; Feminismos islámicos, africanos y negros.


lunes, 17 de octubre de 2011

AfricaInEs participa del CEFAS Seminar programme on Gender Transformations in the Arabian Peninsula and the Horn of Africa” en el Cairo

CEFAS Seminar programme on Gender Transformations in the Arabian Peninsula and the Horn of Africa”. The seminar will be held in Cairo, November 16th and 17th 2011. 
Conference location: 1, Madrasset El Huquq El Frinsiya Street, El Mounira, Cairo, Egypt

Wednesday November 16th
9:30-11:00: Opening session

9:30-10:00: Blandine Destremau et Stéphanie Latte-Abdallah Michel Tuchscherer
Welcome address, the project, the organisation of the conference

10:00 – 11:00: Stéphanie Latte-Abdallah (CNRS, IREMAM)
Stakes and challenges in gender studies in the Arab world, followed by a debate with the floor

11:00-11:30: coffee break

11:30 – 13:00: Session 1 Public Policies and Gender Development (Development)

Discussant : Blandine Destremau (CNRS, LISE)

AL-SAGGAF Ali Ahmed, Department of Statistics& Informative, Faculty of Administrative Sciences, University of Aden
“Gender and Development. A Case Study of Arabian Peninsula Countries”

HASSAN Houssein Souraya, CRUD - University of Djibouti
    “Women, public policies and Development in Djibouti”

PEUTZ Nathalie, Arab Crossroads Studies at New York University in Abu Dhabi
“Targeted Women and A Barred Development in Yemen’s Socotra Archipelago”

TRENTO Giovanna, Center for Humanities Research, University of the Western Cape, South Africa, French Center for Ethiopian Studies, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
“The “Construction” of Ethiopian-Italians: Gender Relations in the Horn of Africa During and After Italian Colonialism”

Discussion
13:00 – 14:30: lunch

14:30 – 16:00: session 2: Public Policies and Gender Development (Rights and emancipation) –

Discussant: Martina Rieker, Institute for Gender and Women’s Studies (AUC)

DAHLGREN Susanne, Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies
“Revisiting the Southern women's rights issue in Yemen : the law, the shari'a and the custom”

KAROLAK Magdalena, New York Institute of Technology, College of Arts and Science, Adliya, Kingdom of Bahrain,
“Female emancipation in Bahrain : a tool for social reform”

*Strzelecka Ewa, University of Granada (Spain)
Gender, Culture and Development: Islam and Women’s Human Rights in Yemen


SAFAR Jihan, Institut d’Etudes Politiques, Paris
The birth spacing policy in the sultanate of Oman : a ‘modern’ project for the couple and the family

Discussion
16:00 – 16:30: tea break

16:30 – 18:00: session 3: Employment, Professions and Labor (employment markets and mobility)

Discussant : Marina De Regt, International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam

LE RENARD Amélie, CNRS-CMH-PRO
Replacing Foreign Workers by Saudi Women: Policy and Practices

MAHDAVI Pardis, Pomona College, Claremont California
“Trafficked Women” and “Migrant Men”: Questioning Discursive Constructions of Gendered Migration in the United Arab Emirates

CAMELIN Sylvaine, Université de Paris Ouest Nanterre-la Défense
“Educated migrant women in the Gulf”

CHRISTIANSEN Connie Carøe, Institute for Society and Globalisation, Roskilde University, Denmark
“Gender and social remittances; return migrants to Yemen from the Horn of Africa”

Discussion

Thursday November 17th
9:30 – 11:00: session 4: Employment, Professions and Labor (service and care)

Discussant : Amélie le Renard, CNRS-CMH-PRO, Paris

ARAB Chadia, CNRS - UMR ESO-Angers (6590), Espaces et Sociétés, Angers
“Moroccan female migration in the United Arab Emirates From spatial and social liberation to production of social breakdown and marginalization”

DE REGT Marina, International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam
“Gender and Ethnicity in Paid Domestic Labour: Past and Present Experiences of Ethiopian and Eritrean Women in Yemen”

NAGY Sharon, DePaul University, Chicago
“Stigmatizing Service—Work, Gender and Morality in Bahrain / Bahraini and non-Bahraini Women in the Workforce 1971-2011:  changing attitudes toward work, gender and nationality”

MOULIN Anne-Marie, SPHERE/Paris 7 University,
“Gender and Care. The controversial status and recent evolution of female health
professionals in the Arabic Peninsula”

Discussion
11:00 – 11:30: coffee break

11:30 – 13:00: session 5: Intimacy and Moral debates (representations, violence and gender identity construction)

Discussant: Najat Sayem, University of Sana’a

AHMAD ABDUL IZZI Arwa, Dept. of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities and Arts, Sana’a University
Experiences of individuals on the gender based violence in Yemeni society

QANBAR Nada, Faculty of Arts- Taiz University
    The Image of Women in the Yemeni Proverbs

ISMA'IL Rokhsana ; SHAMSHER ALI Radia, University of Aden ; Science & Technology Center- Aden University
Masculinity and it’s Impact on Violence Against Women in Yemen ( Aden )

RYAN Stephanie Cate, Political Science/Sociology University of Innsbruck Austria, PROFANTER Annemarie, Faculty of Education at the Free University of Bolzano
    Religious and Spiritual Tools for Male Societal Integration in Saudi Arabia

PLANEL Vincent, MMSH- IDEMEC, Aix-en-Provence
The three brothers of al-Hawdh and Mansour the French
The fall of urban charismatic figures in the Yemen of the 2000s

Discussion
13:00 – 14:30: lunch

14:30 – 16:00: session 6: Intimacy and Moral debates (women’s subjectivities in and outside the family)

Discussant: Rokhsana Isma’il, University of Aden

VAN OORSHOT Irene, Faculty of the Social Sciences, Erasmus University Rotterdam
“Emerging Cosmopolitanisms: Constructing New Subjectivities in the Female Qāt Chew”

VENTURA Mustienes Gemma, Garcia-Ventura Agnès, Universitat de Barcelona
    “Building new spaces: gender and linguistic interactions in Al-Sanea's Banat Al-Riyadh”

RYAN Stephanie Cate, Political Science/Sociology University of Innsbruck Austria, PROFANTER Annemarie, Faculty of Education at the Free University of Bolzano
“Indigenous Polygyny. Desert Designs and Daring Delineations: Individual Options and Tribal (Dhofar, Oman)”

BASALEEM Huda, Department of Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Aden University
“Women’s Reproductive Health Seeking Behaviour in Four Districts in Sana’a: Qualitative Analysis”

Discussion
16:00 – 17:30: Blandine Destremau: wrap-up, discussion, follow-up



*Ewa es miembro de AfricaInEs


Organized by CEFAS (The French Centre in Sana’a for Archaeology and Social Sciences,http://www.cefas.com.ye

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