<Article>Gender Equality in Tunisia
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概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Production levels and other economic criteria generally measure the progress made by people in the modern world. However one of the best indicators of the extent of the economic changes is the place occupied by women in the social fabric. There is a close correlation between the level of social progress in a given society and the degree of women's emancipation.In Tunisia women's participation in all levels of public life was until recently a dream. Yet such participation is now considered a part of the life of the country, bearing witness to the vast resource fullness of Tunisian women. Tunisian women's rights were not a result of coordinated factitious policy decisions, but they were also part of a huge social reform movement with roots back in the 1930s and whose impact was to be as crucial as that of its national independence in 1956. Although the Code of Personal Status (CPS) N promulgated in Tunisia on the 13 August 1956, is considered the legal basis of women's emancipation, the many and various changes in Tunisian women's rights are not due solely to this statute. Since 7 November 1987, and under the new leadership of president Ben Ali, Tunisia has been mobilized in an effort to achieve a whole series of ambitious objectives necessitating the participation of all citizens without exclusion, aiming to build a strong, modern, pluralistic civil society in which women, full citizens by law and in reality, assume their rights and duties.
- 関西学院大学の論文
- 2003-03-31