This article draws on feminist ethnographic research to examine Rohingya refugee women’s place-making activities through the case of the taleem—a women’s prayer space—as a site of identity, home and belonging in the refugee camps outside of Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. The findings suggest that, as a space for religious activity and prayer, taleems hold important meanings for Rohingya women in three ways: in the social relations—bonds and friendships—it creates; through religious observance as a coping strategy; and providing a sense of collective identity and belonging in displacement by evoking positive memories of ‘home’.
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Abolishing Child Marriage in Indonesia’s Marriage Law through Feminist Legal Theory and Child’s Rights Approach
Sigiro, Atnike Nova. “Abolishing Child Marriage in Indonesia’s Marriage Law through Feminist Legal Theory and Child’s Rights Approach.” Jurnal Perempuan 25, no. 2 (2020): 117.
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- Authors with Diverse Backgrounds
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Gender-Based Violence AND 'Feminicide' in Queer Italian Movements: Questioning Gender, Sexuality, and The (Hetero) Normative Order
Peroni, Caterina. “Gender-Based Violence AND 'Feminicide' in Queer Italian Movements: Questioning Gender, Sexuality, and The (Hetero) Normative Order.” SSRN, January 6, 2016.
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- Authors with Diverse Backgrounds