Beschreibung
The main aim of this study is to investigate the impact of womens activism on the gender equality agenda in Turkey, specifically in terms of legislative reforms. In this context, this study is devoted to a more elaborate assessment of the Campaign for the Turkish Penal Code in 2005. This work is that womens activism in Turkey, which made its way into public discourse in the 1980s, maturing and becoming institutionalized in the 1990s, transformed into an effective civil society agent in shaping social policy. In this process, womens organizations increasingly engaged with international womens rights mechanisms and used them in demanding the state to comply with its international obligations.
Autorenporträt
Ayse Gönüllü Atakan received the B.A. degree in international relations from Dokuz Eylül University (DEU), Izmir, Turkey, in 2001; M.Sc. degree in gender and women's studies from Middle East Technical University (METU), Ankara, Turkey, in 2005; and the Ph.D. degree in sociology from METU, Ankara, Turkey, in 2014.