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The Different Roles of Women in the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria: An Explanation.

Why do women not run away from a violent anti-feminist group like ISIS even though gender norms dictate that women shall be peaceful, stereotypes highlight that they are peace-loving, and rationality directs that they should not leave their patriarchal societies only to join another mini patriarchal...

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Main Author: Baher Hassanein, Menan
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Baher Hassanein, Menan
author_browse Baher Hassanein, Menan
author_facet Baher Hassanein, Menan
author_sort Baher Hassanein, Menan
collection Thesis
description Why do women not run away from a violent anti-feminist group like ISIS even though gender norms dictate that women shall be peaceful, stereotypes highlight that they are peace-loving, and rationality directs that they should not leave their patriarchal societies only to join another mini patriarchal one? This thesis aimed to answer this question and focused on non-Western ISIS female members. Notably, this study was merely interested in a gender-based explanation in the sense that it wanted to see how gender dynamics, norms and gender-related grievances push Daesh women into the group’s ranks. This study hypothesized that women join ISIS because empowerment prospects are clear through the real-life experiences of ISIS women, not through the organization’s official discourse. After doing a literature review on women in rebel groups and terrorist women, the thesis realized women in violent and non-violent roles might have different motives. So, it hypothesized that Al-Khansaa Brigade members would demonstrate a drive for empowerment, but ISIS mothers/wives would not. Rather, they would highlight the importance of gender norms and roles (as women in anti-feminist movements do). The methodology of this thesis was a discourse analysis of ISIS women’s interviews and social media posts. It entailed searching for indicators of empowerment in their rhetoric. Testimonies of Iraqi and Syrian women who witnessed ISIS rule were also examined. The study concluded the gap between Daesh’s discourse, female members’ actions and their feelings of empowerment. It was also found that not all women in non-violent positions were impacted by an internalization of sexist ideas. Other factors not related to their gender identity pulled them to the group. Lastly, the thesis’s hypothesis that women in violent roles had endeavors for empowerment was confirmed (with some exclusions).
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institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:35:55.364Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3539 The Different Roles of Women in the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria: An Explanation. Baher Hassanein, Menan Why do women not run away from a violent anti-feminist group like ISIS even though gender norms dictate that women shall be peaceful, stereotypes highlight that they are peace-loving, and rationality directs that they should not leave their patriarchal societies only to join another mini patriarchal one? This thesis aimed to answer this question and focused on non-Western ISIS female members. Notably, this study was merely interested in a gender-based explanation in the sense that it wanted to see how gender dynamics, norms and gender-related grievances push Daesh women into the group’s ranks. This study hypothesized that women join ISIS because empowerment prospects are clear through the real-life experiences of ISIS women, not through the organization’s official discourse. After doing a literature review on women in rebel groups and terrorist women, the thesis realized women in violent and non-violent roles might have different motives. So, it hypothesized that Al-Khansaa Brigade members would demonstrate a drive for empowerment, but ISIS mothers/wives would not. Rather, they would highlight the importance of gender norms and roles (as women in anti-feminist movements do). The methodology of this thesis was a discourse analysis of ISIS women’s interviews and social media posts. It entailed searching for indicators of empowerment in their rhetoric. Testimonies of Iraqi and Syrian women who witnessed ISIS rule were also examined. The study concluded the gap between Daesh’s discourse, female members’ actions and their feelings of empowerment. It was also found that not all women in non-violent positions were impacted by an internalization of sexist ideas. Other factors not related to their gender identity pulled them to the group. Lastly, the thesis’s hypothesis that women in violent roles had endeavors for empowerment was confirmed (with some exclusions). 2025-06-15T07:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2490 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3539/viewcontent/auto_convert.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Women in Rebel Groups Women in ISIS ISIS Gender Orientation Gender and Political Violence Terrorist Women Islamist Rebel Groups Women Empowerment Anti-Feminism Internalized Sexism Female Masculinity.
spellingShingle Women in Rebel Groups
Women in ISIS
ISIS Gender Orientation
Gender and Political Violence
Terrorist Women
Islamist Rebel Groups
Women Empowerment
Anti-Feminism
Internalized Sexism
Female Masculinity.
Baher Hassanein, Menan
The Different Roles of Women in the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria: An Explanation.
title The Different Roles of Women in the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria: An Explanation.
title_full The Different Roles of Women in the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria: An Explanation.
title_fullStr The Different Roles of Women in the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria: An Explanation.
title_full_unstemmed The Different Roles of Women in the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria: An Explanation.
title_short The Different Roles of Women in the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria: An Explanation.
title_sort different roles of women in the islamic state of iraq and syria an explanation
topic Women in Rebel Groups
Women in ISIS
ISIS Gender Orientation
Gender and Political Violence
Terrorist Women
Islamist Rebel Groups
Women Empowerment
Anti-Feminism
Internalized Sexism
Female Masculinity.
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2490
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3539/viewcontent/auto_convert.pdf
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