Interviewee: | Isobel Coleman, Senior Fellow for U.S. Foreign Policy, CFR |
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Interviewer: | Deborah Jerome, Deputy Editor, CFR.org |
April 30, 2010
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“Women with rising levels of literacy are engaging in this debate,” says Coleman. In many cases, they are supported by mainstream clerics and thinkers, she says. But they are also taking the great risk of challenging the patriarchal tribal practices and other local traditions that have been grafted onto Islam.
Coleman sees the advocacy for knowledge and education as the greatest driver of change, because of an economic benefit from education that's understood by men as well as women. “Fathers I talked to understand that there's an economic benefit to educating girls. They want their girls to be educated.” The resulting economic and educational empowerment, says Coleman, can over time lead to vast changes in human rights that will transform the Muslim world.
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