Woman looks down over a crowd protesting in the street. She is wearing a shirt that reads "Disobey" in English and Farsi

MENA Women conference: From street protest to online activism

Blake Eligh

International activists and scholars will gather at the University of Toronto’s downtown Toronto and Mississauga campuses on Thursday, March 22 and Friday March 23. The two-day conference explores how women are using new media and social media networks to effect political changes in the Middle East and North Africa.

Victoria Tahmasebi-Birgani
The MENA Women: From Street Protest to Online Activism conference is organized by Victoria Tahmasebi-Birgani, an assistant professor of women and gender studies at the University of Toronto Mississauga. “We will explore how women and activist feminists use online space and transform it to become feminist sites of struggle,” she says. “This is a burgeoning field. European and North American feminism doesn’t speak to the experiences, priorities, historical contexts and lived experiences of Middle Eastern and North African women. These scholars have something important to contribute to feminist modes of theorizing, to feminist struggle, and to new media and transnational studies.”

The conference features well known scholars in the field of women and digital activism, including German Muslim journalist Kübra Gümüşay, who will discuss her experiences as the country’s first hijab-wearing columnist and how online hate affects activists, social movements and societies; U of T iSchool doctoral student Mariam Karim who will present her study of how Saudi cyberfeminists use Twitter hashtag campaigns in feminist organizing and solidarity; Harvard University scholar and human rights lawyer Simin Kargar who will discuss her study of harmful online speech, gendered persecution and propaganda; and Sima Shakhsari, a University of Minnesota scholar of gender, women and sexuality studies, who will discuss the influence and challenges of women bloggers in Iranian politics.

Tahmasebi-Birgani notes that cyberpolitics and digital activism played an important role in Iran’s Green Movement in 2008 and the Arab Spring uprisings in 2011. “The dissidents used Twitter, which became a vital mode of communication for protestors, causing the Iranian regime to block it. The Arab uprisings started on Facebook and became instrumental in telling people where to go, how to organize, and letting people know about arrests and other news as it unfolded.”  

Since that time, the digital realm has changed and grown as citizens look for new ways to push back against oppressive political regimes. “Digital spaces offered women a new way to organize and learn from each other,” Tahmasebi-Birgani says. “They started campaigns, writing blogs and, increasingly, using social media to create campaigns and networks. She points to activist Facebook pages like My Stealthy Freedom which features photos submitted by bare-headed Iranian women defiantly flouting the state’s compulsory hijab laws. “It has one million followers and has become a  hub for all sorts of activities, dialog and conversation—women post their stories, testimonies and videos,” she says. “These actions contribute to women’s awareness, and gives them courage—when you share stories and read other women’s stories, you feel you can do it, too.”

The two-day conference includes events at the downtown and UTM campuses, and is open to the public. The conference wraps up with a public reception on Friday, March 23 in UTM Room (DV ) from 6 to 9 p.m. on Friday, March 23.

The event is funded by a SSHRC Insight Grant, the New College Initiative Fund and the UTM Dean’s Graduate Expansion Fund, with additional support from UTM’s Department of Historical Studies, UTM’s Women and Gender Studies program, and U of T’s Women and Gender Studies Institute.

Follow the conference onsocial media using the conference hashtag #MENAWomen18, on Twitter at @MenaWomenConfer or on Facebook at MENA Women: From Street Portest to Online Activism.