2018
DOI: 10.35632/ajiss.v35i4.127
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Islam and Support for Gender Inequality among Women in Turkey

Abstract: Turkey has been characterized as a nation that exhibits an amalgam of Eastern and Western cultural values. For a lengthy period of time, Turkey had prohibited Muslim women’s wearing of the veil in many public venues. Yet, the vast majority of this nation’s citizens are highly devout Muslims. Our study uses these paradoxes as a springboard for investigating early twenty-first century religious influences on Turkish Muslim women’s attitudes toward gender inequality. We introduce the theoretical construct of dive… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Intensive reforms to establish gender equality in society, thereby ensuring equal rights and opportunities for both women and men was launched. Moreover, polygamy was abolished, and the entire educational system, from primary to higher education, became mixed gender (Bartkowski, Acevedo, Karakeci, & Campbell, ). Until the early 21st century, Turkey made significant progress in gender equality through the democratization process (Aybars, Copeland, & Tsarouhas, ; Sümer & Eslen‐Ziya, ).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Intensive reforms to establish gender equality in society, thereby ensuring equal rights and opportunities for both women and men was launched. Moreover, polygamy was abolished, and the entire educational system, from primary to higher education, became mixed gender (Bartkowski, Acevedo, Karakeci, & Campbell, ). Until the early 21st century, Turkey made significant progress in gender equality through the democratization process (Aybars, Copeland, & Tsarouhas, ; Sümer & Eslen‐Ziya, ).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Contrary to other studies dealing with multi-religion countries, this study examines Turkey, a country having a homogenous religion, as little is known about the effectiveness of such communication strategies in the lawful or permissible (halal) and prohibited (haram) products in Turkish consumer context. Regarding a country whose population is 99 per cent Muslim (Bartkowski et al , 2018), studies conducted on advertisements with or without religious messages are scarce and using religiosity level as a variable is limited. Turkey is a secular state with a majority of Muslim citizens, the culture is unique because of its geographical location.Being considerably different from the rest of the world, Turkey is a secular nation, very much identified with Islam, and serves as a bridge between Eastern and Western cultures.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%