Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Despite the enormous cultural and economic limitations of women in Sudan, women comprise 24.1% of the national parliament as of 2012. [4] This percentage, however, does not represent the number of women in positions of power throughout the country. Many other nations (developed and developing) have similar percentages of women in politics.
Pages in category "History of women in Sudan" This category contains only the following page. This list may not reflect recent changes. G. Ga'ewa
National poverty lines reflect local perceptions of the level and composition of consumption or income needed to be non-poor. The perceived boundary between poor and non-poor typically rises with the average income of a country and thus does not provide a uniform measure for comparing poverty rates across countries.
Sudanese society was very much in flux in the 2000s. [1] Various factors included: rural to urban migration;; the large numbers of displaced persons—foreign and native—in so many parts of the country, many of whom were starting to return to their homes after the end of the Sudanese civil war;
History of women in Sudan (2 C, 1 P) S. Women's sport in Sudan (2 C, 2 P) W. ... Pages in category "Women in Sudan" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of ...
also: People: By gender: Women: By nationality: Sudanese This category exists only as a container for other categories of Sudanese women . Articles on individual women should not be added directly to this category, but may be added to an appropriate sub-category if it exists.
Éva Fodor and Anikó Balogh, contrary to other researchers, [4] based on pre-collapse and post-collapse survey data, have said that opinions on women as homemakers and their contribution to the workforce, have changed little in central and eastern European states, and in contrast western European states have greatly liberalised their views on ...
Women's economic position was strengthened by the Qur'an, [need quotation to verify] but local custom has weakened that position in their insistence that women must work within the private sector of the world: the home or at least in some sphere related to home. Dr. Nadia Yousaf, an Egyptian sociologist teaching recently in the United States ...