编者简介

Pub Date : 2022-10-18 DOI:10.1111/dome.12280
Catherine Warrick
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期《中东研究文摘》是该杂志今年两期特刊中的第二期。今年1月,我们很高兴推出了一期关于宗派主义的特刊,其中包括关于这个主题的批判性和高度原创的学术。本期十月号的重点是关于该地区性别问题的奖学金。与宗派主义一样,性别是学者和政策制定者长期以来都感兴趣的话题,但(再次与宗派主义类似)也受到文化主义和本质主义假设的影响。然而,过去二十年的学术界越来越多地开始纠正这一早期趋势,本期的作品在理解性别与政治制度、社会运动和政治经济之间关系的关键方法中处于领先地位。此外,本期文章不仅有力地展示了性别与政治学术的进步,而且也展示了性别研究对理解政治行为者、机构和进程的总体贡献。人们希望,我们已经远远超过了性别在学术和政策环境中被认为是次要或小众话题的时代。本期很荣幸邀请政治学家和性别学者GamzeÇavdar作为客座合著者,他对学术的娴熟框架在第一篇文章中介绍,将这些作品放在它们之间的关系和对现有学术文献的贡献的更广泛背景下。在这篇框架文章之后,我们提出了六篇关于政治经济学、制度和社会运动的研究文章;这些研究具有丰富的跨学科性和及时性,我相信它们将引起广大读者的极大兴趣。每一篇文章都是关于其特定主题的优秀学术文章,但整个问题更广泛地反映了该地区性别问题学术的发展。那些既想鸟瞰这一广泛主题,又想对其特殊复杂性进行实质性研究的人应该会发现这是一个有用的集合。与往常一样,我要感谢同行评审员,他们的评估和反馈为这里介绍的工作质量做出了贡献。我也感谢该杂志编辑助理米莎·达茨科夫斯基的技术协助。最重要的是,我必须感谢作者们对这个问题的杰出贡献,我们希望你能发现这些文章引人入胜,令人振奋。
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Editor's introduction

This issue of the Digest of Middle East Studies is the second of two special issues in this year's volume of the journal. In January, we were pleased to bring out a special issue on sectarianism featuring critical and highly original scholarship on the topic. This October issue has as its focus the scholarship on gender issues in the region. Like sectarianism, gender is a topic that has long been of interest to scholars and policymakers alike, but (again like sectarianism) has also been subject to culturalist and essentializing assumptions. The scholarship of the past two decades, however, has increasingly begun to correct this earlier trend, and the works featured in this issue are at the very leading edge of critical approaches to understanding the relationship between gender and political institutions, social movements, and political economy. Furthermore, the articles of this issue ably demonstrate not only advances in the scholarship on gender and politics, but the essential contributions that the study of gender makes to the understanding of political actors, institutions, and processes generally. We are, one hopes, well past the years when gender was considered a minor or niche topic in both scholarship and policy environments.

This issue is honored to have as guest coeditor the political scientist and gender scholar Gamze Çavdar, whose adept framing of the scholarship is presented in the first article, placing these works in the broader context of their relationship and contributions to existing academic literatures. After this framing article, we present six research articles on political economy, institutions, and social movements; these studies are richly interdisciplinary and timely, and I am confident that they will be deeply interesting to a wide audience. Each article is an excellent piece of scholarship on its particular topic, but the issue as a whole serves as a representation of developments in the scholarship of gender issues in the region more broadly. Those looking for both a bird's-eye view of this broad topic and a substantive examination of its particular complexities should find this a useful collection.

As always, I wish to thank the peer reviewers whose assessments and feedback have contributed to the quality of the work presented here. I am also grateful for the skilled assistance of the journal's editorial assistant, Misha Datskovsky. Most of all, I must thank the authors for their outstanding contributions to this issue, and we hope that you find these articles engaging and stimulating.

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