Annotated Bibliography on Women’s Right

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Annotated Bibliography on Women’s Right

Bradley, Samantha. “Domestic and family violence in post-conflict communities: International human rights law and the state’s obligation to protect women and children.” Health and human rights 20.2 (2018): 123.

This article comes from Health and Human Rights journal. It is a credible and legitimate source since it provides information that leads a reader to believe that the authors are experts on the information. It is such an article that I one can rely on heavily to make peripheral points. From the article, post-conflict societies constantly go through high family and domestic violence rates against women. A culmination of violence in the community domain is commonly perceived to precipitate the increase of violence in the private sphere. This piece of writing provides the argument that protecting women’s rights from domestic and family ought to be a vital public policy objective in post-conflict communities. Additionally, the imperative for putting domestic and family violence on the post-conflict program is resultant from nations’ responsibilities under international human rights law. Legal philosophy is open that if a nation has a familiarity of this violence yet does not take reasonable efforts to guarantee victims’ protection and to investigate complaints, then that nation might be violating the vital human rights to life. The intended audience of this article is the community at large.

Fong, Yang Lai, and Shammah Esther Chiriseri Nyathi. “Gender Representation and Framing of Malaysian Women: A Study of Feature Articles in Female Magazine.” Journal of Content, Community and Communication 10.9 (2019): 29-38.

This writing is from a examination of feature articles in Female Magazine. According to the writing, several media platforms are powerful tools for socialization and communication. It is a major commercial press. It also uses credible sources to provide this information. By utilizing media representations, the audience establishes a manner of making sense of themselves and the universe. This information from a Study of Feature Articles in Female Magazine focuses on the portrayal of gender as a concept of masculinity and femininity. As a result, it reflects on human rights and how women are treated in society. Femininity and masculinity are a set of norms, attitudes, and values of females and males in society. The research used content analysis as the research method and framing as the theoretical framework to examine the representation of Malaysian women and the representation of femininity and masculinity in Female magazine. It was established that Female magazine did not put any traditional boundary, limit, or stereotype on its representation of Malaysian women. As an alternative, the magazine encouraged female readers to follow their passions, rivaling both the feminine and masculine characteristics crucial to be fruitful. This source is legitimate since it provides information that leads a reader to believe that the writer is an expert on the information.

Joshi, Madhav, and Louise Olsson. “War termination and women’s political rights.” Social Science Research 94 (2021): 102523.

This article examines women’s party-political rights developments in the post-war period and also explains the importance of warfare culmination types. In its reading, the authors seek to answer the question of whether the way in which political warfare is brought to an end affect’s women’s political rights progress. In this piece of writing, the writers create an analytical context demonstrating how the setting of warfare termination type impacts both willingness and opportunity of opposing parties and their candidness towards the impact of international players. It thus makes it probable to translate pressures from women’s groups and social ruptures into post-war advances in women’s political rights. The findings hold after controlling for the women’s rights provisions negotiated in agreements. It carries considerable policy significance by emphasizing the importance of women’s inclusion in peace processes. The article proceeds as follows; it starts by revisiting previous research and giving an outline of the analytical context by integrating a study on war ending with a study on conflict resolution and gender equality. It then applies short experimental illustrations of war culmination dynamics that let the authors show the theoretical devices precise to diverse war culmination kinds and frame their hypotheses. This article is a legitimate source and also reliable in a way that it provides a well-reasoned, thorough discussion or argument centered on strong evidence. It is a peer-reviewed articles hence legitimate. The article fits with what I already know because it centers on the subject of women’s right.

Radke, Helena RM, Matthew J. Hornsey, and Fiona Kate Barlow. “Changing versus protecting the status quo: Why men and women engage in different types of action on behalf of women.” Sex Roles 79.9 (2018): 505-518.

This article examines women’s and men’s readiness to take part in the action on behalf of women. The authors categorize the distinct types of behavior: action that purposes to challenge gender inequality and action that purposes to defend women from violence. In this article, three online research were conducted. For each one, the researchers used a United States community sample. In the first study, women reported higher intentions to take part in feminist activities than men did. Just like women, men were willing to take part in protective actions. In the second study, the researchers replicated the gender differences and realized that protective action was positively foretold by benevolent sexism among men. In the last study, they examined why women reported higher intentions to take part in feminist activities than men. The findings indicated that women are more aware of discrimination and gender inequality, which was connected with identification as a feminist. The article uses different types of sources. The source covers the topic comprehensively in a way that it does not only cover one aspect. The terminology and language used are also easy to understand. The author’s background is well established in terms of experience and knowledge.

Schleifer, Rebecca, and Luciana Pol. “International Guidelines on Human Rights and Drug Control: A Tool for Securing Women’s Rights in Drug Control Policy.” Health and human rights 19.1 (2017): 253.

This article is from Hun Health rights that were published in June 2017. The author’s background is well established in terms of experience and knowledge. It is a legitimate source because the author provides citations all the way through the article. It is a major research institution, well written, and one that will contribute to the research paper. According to this article, discrimination and inequality shape women’s experiences in the drug trade and drug use and the effect of drug control attempts on them, with disproportionate problems faced by poor and if not downgraded women. From the article, the United Nations have started to pay attention to women’s drug usage and involvement in the drug trade since women are also important members of society. They deserve equal rights like any other person. From the article, gender is a relational notion that captures the action of socially created attributes, identities, and role expectations for individuals deemed male or female. The women’s right to equality and non-discrimination on the foundation of gender was first protected in the UN Agreement and later in all major human rights contracts. Women deserve equal rights as men and should not be harassed or discriminated against in any way.

Thorsen, Einar, and Chindu Sreedharan. “# EndMaleGuardianship: Women’s rights, social media and the Arab public sphere.” New media & society 21.5 (2019): 1121-1140.

This research article analyzes the online communicative dynamics between men and women during the Saudi Arabia women’s campaign to bring to an end male guardianship, which spread-out on Twitter. The authors examined 2.6 million tweets with the #EndMaleGuardianship hashtag over a 6-month quantitatively and 140,245 of these qualitatively to analyze the range to which Twitter outlines and helps cross-gender communication, and in what way this aided engender new spaces for the expression of dissent. There was a piece of evidence using alternative spaces; women excelled to an extent the gender discrimination that occurs in traditional community debates and spaces of Saudi society. The obscurity of Twitter provided women a safe place to give their issues concerning male guardianship. This journal is legitimate since its information is up to date, trustworthy, and credible. The name of the author is indicated in the journal, and the information appears accurate. The article fits with what I already know in a way that it talks about discrimination of the women in Arabic countries. It will contribute to my research paper to the greatest extent.

Zwingel, Susanne. “Women’s rights norms as content-in-motion and incomplete practice.” Third World Thematic: A TWQ Journal 2.5 (2017): 675-690.

This article formulates two claims concerning women’s domestic implementation and their rights: First, continuing global discussions have made both contestation and agreement concerning the denotation of women’s rights. Henceforth, the perception is ‘in motion.’ Subsequently, this has resulted in various types of domestic engagement with this set of standards. The procedures have two elements, the first being the conversion between placed connotations, the second being the real execution of the idea, a dynamic that is still primarily incomplete. In order to explicate these assertions, the article first provides translation forces at work in the work of the CEDAW Board. It then traces translation efforts in Chile and Finland, two culturally different nations parties to the Convention. This source is well written, organized, and looks professional. It’s a website whose links are not broken, and one can easily navigate through. It is, as a result, credible and reliable for the research paper. This article is a major research institution.

Works Cited

Bradley, Samantha. “Domestic and family violence in post-conflict communities: International human rights law and the state’s obligation to protect women and children.” Health and human rights 20.2 (2018): 123.

Fong, Yang Lai, and Shammah Esther Chiriseri Nyathi. “Gender Representation and Framing of Malaysian Women: A Study of Feature Articles in Female Magazine.” Journal of Content, Community and Communication 10.9 (2019): 29-38.

Joshi, Madhav, and Louise Olsson. “War termination and women’s political rights.” Social Science Research 94 (2021): 102523.

Radke, Helena RM, Matthew J. Hornsey, and Fiona Kate Barlow. “Changing versus protecting the status quo: Why men and women engage in different types of action on behalf of women.” Sex Roles 79.9 (2018): 505-518.

Schleifer, Rebecca, and Luciana Pol. “International Guidelines on Human Rights and Drug Control: A Tool for Securing Women’s Rights in Drug Control Policy.” Health and human rights 19.1 (2017): 253.

Thorsen, Einar, and Chindu Sreedharan. “# EndMaleGuardianship: Women’s rights, social media and the Arab public sphere.” New media & society 21.5 (2019): 1121-1140.

Zwingel, Susanne. “Women’s rights norms as content-in-motion and incomplete practice.” Third World Thematic: A TWQ Journal 2.5 (2017): 675-