Women in the Middle East and North Africa: Issues for Congress

Women in the Middle East and North Africa:
December 16, 2021
Issues for Congress
Zoe Danon
Many experts have found that women in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) fare worse
Coordinator of Research
than those in other parts of the world on a range of social, economic, legal and political measures.
Planning
Some attribute this underperformance to prevailing gender roles and perspectives (including

discriminatory laws and beliefs), as well as challenges facing the region overall (such as a
Sarah R. Collins
preponderance of undemocratic governments, poor economic growth, wars, and mass
Research Assistant
displacement, which often disproportionately affect women). Key issues facing many women in

the region include, but are not limited to, the following:

Unequal Legal Rights. Women in the MENA region face greater legal discrimination
than women elsewhere on issues such as marriage, freedom of movement, and inheritance, as well as
limited to no legal protection from domestic violence.
Constraints on Economic Participation and Opportunity. Challenges facing the region overall, in
addition to gender-based discrimination, contribute to a significant difference between men’s and women’s
participation in MENA economies. For example, women do not participate in the labor force to the same
degree as women in other regions, and those who do participate face on average nearly twice the levels of
unemployment than men.
Underrepresentation in Political Processes. Women are poorly represented in legislative bodies
compared to the global average, and several countries have witnessed reductions in women’s representation
in recent elections.
Conflict and Displacement. The MENA region has experienced a disproportionate share of conflict and
population displacement over the last decade. Women and children are at a higher risk of exploitation and
abuse in conflict and displacement settings.
Lack of Representation in Conflict Resolution and Peace Negotiations. Women have been
underrepresented in most formal efforts to resolve the MENA region’s three largest ongoing wars in Libya,
Syria, and Yemen, despite attempts by some international actors to involve women in these processes.
Roles in Radicalization, Terrorism, and Violent Extremism. Women, like men, may find radicalization
by extremist groups like the Islamic State attractive. Some extremists target women for support and
recruitment, though experts have noted that women also may be uniquely positioned to counter violent
extremist ideology.
Members of Congress have supported U.S. efforts to bolster gender equality in the MENA region in the context of
advocating for women’s rights and well-being globally. Some also have argued that supporting women’s rights may advance
broader U.S. national security interests in the region. To bolster these positions, some proponents cite research suggesting
that the relative status of women in society may be linked to greater political stability, security, and economic prosperity, as
well as to better governance.
Congress has addressed issues related to women through foreign assistance appropriations and authorizations, resolutions,
statements and letters, and oversight activities. Some of these measures have been global in scope, while others have been
specific to the MENA region. Going forward, Members may consider and debate the appropriate level and types of U.S.
engagement on the particular challenges facing women in different MENA countries.
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Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1
Status of Women in the MENA Region ........................................................................................... 1
Key Challenges ................................................................................................................................ 2
Discriminatory Laws and Beliefs ........................................................................................ 3
Regional Dynamics ............................................................................................................. 3

Overview of U.S. Policy .................................................................................................................. 4
Selected MENA-Specific Congressional Action ....................................................................... 5
Policy Issues .................................................................................................................................... 7
Legal Rights .............................................................................................................................. 7
Economic Participation and Opportunity ................................................................................ 10
Political Representation .......................................................................................................... 13
Conflict and Displacement ...................................................................................................... 16
Conflict Resolution and Peace Negotiations ........................................................................... 19
Radicalization, Terrorism, and Violent Extremism ................................................................. 21
Considerations for Congress.......................................................................................................... 23

Figures
Figure 1. MENA Performance on Global Measures of Women’s Equality ..................................... 2
Figure 2. Public Opinion on Women’s Rights in Select MENA Countries ..................................... 3
Figure 3. Legal Discrimination Score by World Region ................................................................. 8
Figure 4. Selected Measures of Legal Discrimination Against MENA Women ............................ 10
Figure 5. Selected Economic Indicators for Women in the MENA region ................................... 13
Figure 6. Political Representation of Women ................................................................................ 15
Figure 7. Conflict, Displacement, and Gender-based Violence ..................................................... 19

Contacts
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 24


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Introduction
U.S. efforts to improve conditions for women in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) have
garnered widespread support since at least the early 2000s. The broad appeal may reflect a
convergence of goals for those advocating positive change for women as an end-goal in itself, and
those supporting such change primarily as a potential means to advance broader U.S. interests in
the region, such as peace and stability, countering terrorism, increasing prosperity, and fostering
good governance and human rights. A growing body of research suggests that improving
opportunities and conditions for women in a society may promote such outcomes both globally
and in the region.
This report provides background and data on key issues regarding women in the MENA region
and describes selected ways in which Congress has engaged on issues such as women’s legal
rights, economic participation, and political representation; the humanitarian impact of conflict
and displacement on women; women’s inclusion in conflict resolution and peace processes;
violence against women; and women’s roles in perpetuating and combatting violent extremism.
Members of Congress have demonstrated an interest in women’s issues, both within the MENA
region and globally, through legislation, statements and letters, direct engagement with regional
leaders and civil society, and oversight.
For the purposes of this report, the MENA region comprises the areas defined as “Near East” by
the State Department: Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates (UAE), and Yemen.1
Status of Women in the MENA Region
Women in MENA fare worse than men and worse than women in most other regions in several
measurable areas. The World Economic Forum’s (WEF’s) 2021 Global Gender Gap Report
ranked the MENA region the lowest in the world for achieving gender equality, with MENA
states comprising 12 of the 25 worst-performing countries globally.2 The region also performed
poorly in the 2021 Women Peace and Security (WPS) Index, and Iraq, Syria, and Yemen—all
countries sustaining levels of violent conflict at the time of survey—were among the 10 worst
performers on the WPS Index.3 At the same time, not all MENA countries perform equally, as
Figure 1 below illustrates. For example, Israel and the United Arab Emirates score higher than
other MENA states on both indices.

1 This report does not include data on the West Bank or the Gaza Strip. Some of the key sources on which this report
relies do not provide data for the West Bank and Gaza. For information on the status of women in the West Bank and
Gaza, see for example: U.N. Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia, “Social and Economic Situation of
Palestinian Women and Girls (July 2018 – June 2020),” at E/ESCWA/CL2.GPID/2020/TP.29, September 8, 2021. The
Women, Peace and Security Index includes data on the Palestinians for the first time in the 2021 edition.
2 The WEF index “benchmarks national gender gaps on economic, education, health and political criteria, and provides
country rankings that allow for effective comparisons across regions and income groups.” The index includes two
countries in the MENA average that are not under the purview of this report: Mauritania and Turkey. The 12 worst-
performing countries in the region are: Yemen, Iraq, Syria, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Morocco, Kuwait, Qatar,
Bahrain, Algeria, and Lebanon. WEF, Global Gender Gap Report 2021, March 2021.
3 The WPS Index measures performance across three dimensions of a woman’s wellbeing: inclusion (economic, social,
and political); justice (formal laws and informal discrimination); and security (at the family, community, and societal
levels). Countries in the bottom quintile are: Syria, Yemen, Iraq, Libya, Algeria, and Morocco. Georgetown Institute
for Women, Peace and Security (GIWPS) and Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), Women, Peace and Security Index
2021: Tracking sustainable peace through inclusion, justice, and security for women
, October 2021.
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Figure 1. MENA Performance on Global Measures of Women’s Equality

Sources: Created by CRS with data from World Economic Forum, Global Gender Gap Report 2021, March 2021;
Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security and Peace Research Institute Oslo, Women, Peace and
Security Index 2021
, October 2021.
Key Challenges
Challenges to expanding the rights and improving conditions for MENA women arguably include
a combination of prevailing gender roles and perspectives and challenges facing the MENA
region overall.
The 2019 WPS Index stated that the region’s poor performance is “traceable
largely to high levels of organized violence and discriminatory laws that disempower women,
often coupled with low rates of inclusion, especially in paid employment.”4 Since the early 2000s,
some experts and policymakers have increasingly related these issues to research examining
possible links between the well-being of women and the overall stability of societies. 5

4 GIWPS and PRIO, Women, Peace and Security Index 2019/20, p. 1. The region scores higher on the 2021 index than
in 2019 (0.604 compared to 0.580), but still holds the lowest scores of any region on financial inclusion, employment,
parliamentary representation, legal discrimination, discriminatory norms, and organized violence.
5 Increased international awareness on these issues led to the adoption of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1325 on
women, peace, and security in October 2000 and nine subsequent resolutions, the most recent being Resolution 2493
(2019).
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Discriminatory Laws and Beliefs
Many experts postulate that some combination of institutionalized legal discrimination, cultural
practices, and religious beliefs about women contribute to gender inequality in the MENA region.
Legal discrimination (discussed in “Legal Rights”) and cultural views relegating women to a
lower standing in many regional countries appear to be pervasive, despite some signs of change.
Public opinion surveys in predominantly Arab countries, which make up most but not all of the
MENA region, suggest that certain cultural beliefs against women’s equality are prevalent. For
example, Arab Barometer’s 2019 survey on women’s rights in 12 Arab countries found that the
majority of survey respondents believed that men are better leaders and should have greater say in
family decision making, and that women should not be allowed to travel independently or have an
equal share in inheritance (see Figure 2).
Figure 2. Public Opinion on Women’s Rights in Select MENA Countries

Source: Created by CRS with data from Kathrin Thomas, “Women’s Rights in the Middle East and North
Africa,” Arab Barometer, August 2019. The Arab Barometer survey included 10 countries within the scope of
this report—Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Tunisia, and Yemen—as well as
Sudan and the Palestinian territories.
Regional Dynamics
Experts also point to challenges facing the region as a whole to explain why women in the MENA
region fare worse than women in most other regions in terms of a broad range of political, legal,
and socioeconomic indicators. Decades of civil and inter-state wars, a lack of effective governing
institutions, and a lag in developing robust, diversified economies arguably have inhibited
progress on these indicators in some countries. Much of the region is experiencing some
combination of war, political instability, terrorism, economic challenges, and/or poor governance.
The COVID-19 pandemic has layered on additional challenges to those preexisting conditions.
These phenomena have had negative impacts on societies as a whole, including some effects that
are unique to, or worse for, women (see textbox below).
Implications of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Women in MENA6
Women in MENA appear to be experiencing poor outcomes related to COVID-19 across a variety of health,
socioeconomic, and development indicators.7 Some research has found that women in the region are less likely to

6 Sara Tharakan, Analyst, Global Health and International Development, authored this section.
7 Sana Afouaiz, How serious is COVID-19 for women in the Arab World?, OECD, April 13, 2021. OECD, COVID-19
crisis in the MENA region: impact on gender equality and policy responses
, OECD Policy Responses to COVID-19,
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have access to quality health care, and those who contract COVID-19 may face greater long-term consequences
to their health, due in part to existing gender disparities in access to health care throughout the region.8 Ongoing
humanitarian crises have also weakened health systems and affected the COVID-19 response. As COVID-19
vaccination campaigns ramp up, women in some MENA countries reportedly have lacked early access to vaccines
and may be susceptible to vaccine-related misinformation due to lower literacy levels than men, compounding
global vaccine access equity issues.9
Since early 2020, countries in the MENA region have experienced economic downturns partly arising from the
pandemic—including its impact on global trade and travel, along with the physical lockdown measures imposed to
reduce the spread of COVID-19 in the region. In October 2021, the IMF estimated the region’s GDP contracted
by 3.2% in 2020, with disproportionate impacts felt by the most vulnerable workers, including women.10 While the
ful impact of the pandemic has yet to be reflected in some of the labor market data presented in this report,11 the
IMF notes that in the MENA region, “The crisis generally affected women more than men because of their sectoral
distribution of employment and their overrepresentation in unpaid care work. [.. ] Overall, the pandemic
compounded the gender gap in labor market outcomes.”12 The prevalence of women in the informal sector,
where basic protections such as unemployment insurance and health benefits are generally lacking, add to their
economic vulnerability. The long-term implications of the pandemic for women in MENA remain to be seen,
including how women’s health and other issues are prioritized in country-level vaccination campaigns and COVID-
19 recovery plans.
Overview of U.S. Policy
Successive U.S. Administrations at least since the George W. Bush presidency have expressed an
interest in improving women’s conditions in the MENA region, and have established or supported
programs aimed at pursuing that goal. Members of Congress have also authorized initiatives and
appropriated funds to enable these efforts. At the same time, activities that specifically address the
well-being of women often compete with other regional policy priorities.
Recent Administrations have sought to include women’s rights within broader national security
and gender frameworks. The Obama Administration’s National Security Strategy (2015)
identifies “advancing equality” as one of its core values: “Recognizing that no society will
succeed if it does not draw on the potential of all its people, we are pressing for the political and
economic participation of women and girls.”13 The Trump Administration’s National Security
Strategy listed the empowerment of women and youth as a priority action, stating “governments
that fail to treat women equally do not allow their societies to reach their potential [while]
societies that empower women to participate fully in civic and economic life are more prosperous
and peaceful.”14 The Biden Administration’s National Strategy on Gender Equity and Equality

June 10, 2020. For example, the COVID-19 pandemic has reportedly exacerbated domestic violence in many countries,
in part due to the effects of physical lockdown measures and restrictions on movement.
8 Global Health 5050, International Center for Research on Women, African Population and Health Research Center,
“The COVID-19 Sex-Disaggregated Data Tracker,” October 27, 2021. N.M. Kronfol, “Access and barriers to health
care delivery in Arab countries: a review,” Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 18 (12), 1239-1246, 2012.
9 Maria Cheng, “‘Marginalized’: Women trail men in some vaccine efforts,” October 14, 2021.
10 International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook, October 2021.
11 ILO, “Keeping Labour Data Flowing During the COVID-19 Pandemic,” September 30, 2021.
12 International Monetary Fund, Regional Economic Outlook: Middle East and Central Asia, October 2021, p. 21.
13 The White House, National Security Strategy, February 2015, p. 20. The Obama Administration separately
promulgated a Strategy to Prevent and Respond to Gender-based Violence Globally (2012), launched the U.S. National
Action plan on Women, Peace, and Security (2011), and established the office of Global Women’s Issues (2009) in the
State Department led by the first Ambassador for Global Women’s issues.
14 The White House, National Security Strategy of the United States of America, November 2017. President Trump also
signed into law the 2017 Women, Peace and Security Act, and promulgated the first U.S. WPS Strategy as well as the
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states that advancing gender equity and equality is “both a moral imperative and a strategic one;
its pursuit drives the growth, development, and security of communities, nations, and the global
economy.”15
The primary U.S. government agencies that address women’s issues in the region are the State
Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). Bilateral aid funded
by the State Department and democracy and governance activities funded by USAID routinely
incorporate the promotion of women’s equality. The Trump Administration requested
approximately $70 million annually from FY2019 to FY2021 for State Department and USAID
gender-focused programs in the region. The Biden Administration requested approximately $85
million for the region in FY2022, which constitutes approximately 1% of the total assistance
request for the region.16 The MENA region accounted for 7-9% of the FY2019-FY2022 total
funding requests for gender programs. Broader U.S. foreign affairs and security assistance
programs addressing cross-cutting issues such as global health, humanitarian activities, defense,
and legal and political rights may also address women’s issues in the region.
It is unclear how much money the United States spends annually on programs that address the
status of women in the MENA region: the executive branch does not consistently or
comprehensively track the number or cost of relevant programs, and Congress has not mandated
such accounting. Capturing this information is complicated by the varying degree to which
programs focus on women, and the extent to which they focus on the region or are part of broader
global initiatives.
Selected MENA-Specific Congressional Action
In recent Congresses, Members aiming to address issues of women’s rights and well-being in the
MENA region have used various legislative mechanisms. In addition to appropriating sums for
gender programming in the region, Congress has used conditions on foreign aid and explored
sanctions options to highlight and prevent abuses of women’s rights. Congress has also exerted its
oversight prerogative to require reports and strategies from the executive branch, and has
expressed concern through resolutions. Some examples from the 117th Congress are described
below.
Conditioning Foreign Assistance. For years, the foreign policy community and Members of
Congress have debated the efficacy of using foreign aid as leverage to promote greater respect for
human rights in the Middle East and elsewhere. In Egypt’s case, since FY2012, Congress has
passed appropriations legislation that withholds the obligation of Foreign Military Financing
(FMF) to Egypt until the Secretary of State certifies that Egypt is taking various steps toward
supporting democracy and human rights, including protecting religious minorities and the rights
of women. While this provision has not been framed exclusively through the prism of promoting
gender equality, the reference to women’s rights has been regularly incorporated into
appropriations language since FY2015 (H.R. 83).

U.S. Strategy to Support Women and Girls at Risk From Violent Extremism and Conflict.
15 The White House, National Strategy on Gender Equity and Equality, October 2021. President Biden has also
established a Gender Policy Council (GPC) within the Executive Office of the President to advance gender equity and
equality in both domestic and foreign policy development and implementation.
16 Congressional Budget Justification supplementary tables for the Department of State, Foreign Operations, and
Related Programs. The Biden Administration requested $7.6 billion for the MENA region in FY2022. See CRS Report
R46344, U.S. Foreign Assistance to the Middle East: Historical Background, Recent Trends, and the FY2022 Request,
by Jeremy M. Sharp, Carla E. Humud, and Sarah R. Collins.
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Sanctions. In the 117th Congress, Members have explored sanctions options related to human
rights (and women’s rights) violations in Saudi Arabia and Libya. The Saudi Arabia
Accountability for Gross Violations of Human Rights Act (H.R. 1464, reported as amended)
would impose sanctions on foreign persons determined to have played a role in the killing of
Jamal Khashoggi, but would allow the President to suspend sanctions if he certifies the
Government of Saudi Arabia has addressed human rights issues, including taking “meaningful
reforms to protect the rights of freedom of expression, religion, women’s rights, and due process
in its judicial system.” Similar provisions were incorporated as Section 6003 of the House-passed
NDAA (H.R. 4350). The Libya Stabilization Act (H.R. 1228, S. 379) passed in the House finds
that a large number of migrants and refugees remain in Libya, including women and children who
are subjected to arbitrary detention, torture and other human rights violations and abuses, sex and
labor trafficking, and are vulnerable to extreme violence by governmental and nonstate armed
groups. The act would provide for sanctions and aid related to the conflict in Libya.
Security Assistance and Conditionality. Incorporated as Section 1346 of the House-passed
FY2022 NDAA (H.R. 4350), the Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnership (TSCTP) Program
Act of 2021 (H.R. 567, S. 615) would provide statutory authority for the TSCTP Program, an
interagency program launched in 2005 to partner with countries in the Sahel and Maghreb regions
of Africa to counter terrorism and violent extremism. Among other priorities, the program would
coordinate all U.S. government efforts to address the factors that make people and communities
vulnerable to recruitment by terrorist and violent extremist organizations, through activities such
as promoting girls’ education and women’s political participation. On security assistance
conditionality, H.Res. 175 (introduced in the House) calls on the U.S. government to cease all
arms transfers until Saudi Arabia “releases prisoners convicted of crimes under the
counterterrorism law for activities that constitute political expression,” including women’s rights
advocates.
Reporting and Strategy Development. Section 1262 of the House-passed FY2022 NDAA (H.R.
4350) would require the President, through the Secretary of State and in coordination with the
Secretary of Defense, to submit a report to congressional committees concerning the U.S. defense
and diplomatic strategy for Syria, including a plan for the resettlement and disposition of the
women and children who are connected to the Islamic State (ISIS or IS) and who remain in
detention facilities in Syria.
Resolutions. A resolution expressing the sense of the Senate regarding the practice of politically
motivated imprisonment of women around the world and calling on governments for the
immediate release of women who are political prisoners (S.Res. 342) makes references to
situations in several MENA countries, including Iran, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia. A resolution
condemning the murder of Alireza Fazeli Monfared and the practice of so-called “honor killings”
in Iran, and for other purposes (H.Res. 497) finds that the practice of “honor killings” in Iran “has
claimed the lives of women, girls, gay men, persons that identify as transgender, and members of
other vulnerable populations, is a violation of internationally recognized human rights,” and states
that Iran should be publicly rebuked and condemned for other human rights abuses based on sex,
sexual orientation, and gender expression.
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Selected Global Congressional Actions
In recent years, Members have introduced or enacted legislation to address women’s issues worldwide, including
on women, peace, and security; economic empowerment; and gender-based violence.17 Although these pieces of
legislation are global in scope, they have the potential to apply to the MENA region given the political, economic
and security conditions in the region. These include:

The Women Peace and Security Act of 2017 (P.L. 115-68) states it is the policy of the United
States “to promote the meaningful participation of women in overseas conflict prevention, management
and resolution, and post-conflict relief and recovery efforts” and calls for the creation of a new Women,
Peace and Security (WPS) strategy to detail the operationalization of the WPS Act, as well as a report to
Congress two years after enactment.18

The Women’s Entrepreneurship and Economic Empowerment Act of 2018 (P.L. 115-428)
modifies USAID programs to provide targeted assistance for women and authorizes the President to
provide programs in developing countries for micro, small, and medium-sized businesses, particularly
those owned, managed, and control ed by women.
Congress has enacted legislation on a range of global women’s issues in annual appropriations bil s. Section 7059 of
the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (Division K, P.L. 116-260) provides up to $560 million to promote
gender equality and women’s empowerment globally, a $230 mil ion increase from FY2020 appropriations. Under
this heading, the act makes available up to $200 mil ion for women’s economic empowerment, not less than $50
mil ion for women’s leadership, not less than $165 mil ion for gender-based violence, not less than $130 mil ion
for Women, Peace, and Security (FY2021 is the first fiscal year in which an amount has been specified for WPS),
and not less than $15 mil ion for women and girls at risk from extremism and conflict. It is unclear to what extent,
if any, such funding might be allocated for programs involving women in the MENA region.
Policy Issues
The following sections describe several issues that policymakers and lawmakers may take into
account when considering whether and how to address the status of women in the MENA region,
including women’s legal rights and protections, economic participation, political representation,
and the impact of conflict and displacement on women and girls.
Legal Rights
The MENA region exhibits high levels of gender-based legal discrimination (see Figure 3): 14
MENA countries fall below the global average and 6 countries are among the world’s bottom 10
performers on the World Bank’s Women, Business and the Law Index.19 Four countries improved
their legal discrimination scores from 2019: Bahrain, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE.20

17 See CRS In Focus IF11804, Global Women’s Issues: Background and Selected U.S. Efforts, coordinated by Luisa
Blanchfield.
18 The Trump Administration delivered its WPS strategy on June 11, 2019. State, USAID, Department of Defense, and
the Department of Homeland Security each developed implementation plans in 2020 to execute the strategy. The Biden
Administration delivered its report to Congress on WPS in July 2021.
19 World Bank, Women, Business and the Law 2021, data as of October 1, 2020.
20 Saudi Arabia and the UAE now rank above the global average on the 2021 Women, Business and the Law index.
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Figure 3. Legal Discrimination Score by World Region
2021 WPS Index

Sources: Created by CRS with data from GIWPS and PRIO, Women, Peace and Security Index 2021. The Index
calculates the legal discrimination score by aggregating and weighting scores of 78 laws and regulations that limit
women’s ability to participate in society or the economy or that differentiate between men and women, as
measured by World Bank, Women, Business and the Law 2021, data as of October 1, 2020.
Note: The WPS index “Fragile States” classification is based on The World Bank’s FY20 List of Fragile and
Conflict-affected Situations.
The constitutions of some MENA countries nominally guarantee legal equality between men and
women (see Figure 4).21 However, in practice, rules governing matters of family law apply
differently to women in nearly all MENA countries, as they are often based on religious
jurisprudence that treats women differently. On issues related to family matters, all of the Arab
countries and Iran apply Islamic law, which is not gender-neutral on marriage, divorce, child
custody and guardianship, and inheritance. Israel’s legal system places status issues of marriage
and divorce under the jurisdiction of religious courts, which include Jewish Rabbinical Religious
Courts, as well as Muslim, Druze, and Christian courts, none of which are gender-neutral.22 In
general, constitutional provisions and laws mandating gender equality cannot be effective if
judicial institutions are not independent and if executive institutions are unwilling or unable to
implement the laws, or hold law-breakers accountable.23
As illustrated in Figure 4, no MENA countries grant women equal rights under the law.
Specifically, women are treated differently under:
Gender equality and discrimination laws. Half of MENA countries (9 of 18)
include a constitutional provision enshrining the principle of gender equality. The
other half either have an equality provision that does not specifically mention the
term “gender,” or they provide for equality based on Islamic legal criteria, which
treat women and men differently.
Domestic violence laws. More than half (10 of 18) of MENA countries have laws
addressing domestic violence. In three of these countries, legal provisions address

21 Additionally, every MENA country, with the exception of Iran, has ratified the Convention to Eliminate All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), though almost every country ratified with conditions. (The United States
has not ratified CEDAW.)
22 In Israel, laws regulating inheritance, transmission of citizenship, and age of marriage do not differentiate between
persons based on their gender. The Law Library of Congress, “Legal Provisions on Gender Equality: Arab Countries,
Israel, Iran,” LL File No. 2020-018615, February 2020. See also Ruth Levush, “Israel: Spousal Agreements for
Couples Not Belonging to Any Religion—A Civil Marriage Option?” Law Library of Congress, September 2015.
23 For example, the State Department noted that in Morocco, “the judiciary lacked willingness to enforce [family law
reforms enacted in 2004], as many judges did not agree with their provisions,” and that “corruption among working-
level court clerks and lack of knowledge about its provisions among lawyers were also obstacles to enforcing the law.”
U.S. Department of State, “Morocco 2020 Human Rights Report,” March 30, 2021.
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some acts of domestic violence but do not address marital rape. Kuwait passed its
first law combating domestic violence in August 2020.24
Age of marriage laws. More than half of MENA countries (11 of 18) have set a
minimum age for marriage of 18 or older for both girls and boys. Nevertheless, 13
countries (including Israel) have a provision in their family law allowing a religious
court to marry women younger than the legal age of marriage. Iran has the lowest
legal age of marriage for girls at 13 years old (the age for boys is 15), and children
may marry earlier with the consent of the father. Yemen has no minimum age for
marriage.

24 “Kuwait’s National Assembly passes domestic violence bill,” The National, August 20, 2020.
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Figure 4. Selected Measures of Legal Discrimination Against MENA Women

Source: Created by CRS with data from the GIWPS and PRIO, Women, Peace and Security Index 2021 (legal
discrimination score derived from WBL Index 2021) and The Law Library of Congress, “Legal Provisions on
Gender Equality: Arab Countries, Israel, Iran,” LL File No. 2020-018615, February 2020.
Economic Participation and Opportunity
Studies have demonstrated a correlation between the extent to which women are involved and
empowered in a country’s economy and politics, and better outcomes for the overall society in
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terms of economic growth and stability.25 The World Bank has argued that “gender equality is
smart economics,” asserting that gender equality enhances productivity and improves other
development outcomes, including prospects for the next generation and for the quality of societal
policies and institutions.26 Some experts have argued that the limits in women’s economic
participation may be among many factors that have contributed to regional shortfalls in economic
development: in 2016, the OECD estimated that gender-based discrimination in laws and social
norms costs the MENA region $575 billion a year.27
The MENA region has long lagged on economic development indicators when compared with
other regions, with the partial exception of major oil- and gas-producing countries. Development
indicators have declined further in some countries as a result of violent unrest since 2011, and in
2020 the “dual shocks” of the COVID-19 pandemic and the oil price fluctuations presented
daunting economic challenges.28 Within the region, states have significant differences with regard
to income level. To some extent, women in states that have achieved more economic success
overall have had higher participation in the labor force and lower unemployment rates than
women in the lower-income, less developed countries (see Figure 5). This pattern is not
uniformly true, however; in Saudi Arabia, where the legal system and culture traditionally have
discouraged women’s participation in the economy, many fewer women work despite relative
national wealth. Saudi authorities have begun encouraging women’s participation in the
workforce in recent years as a component of broader national economic development and
transformation initiatives: data suggests women’s participation is now increasing in the
kingdom.29
The MENA region has historically had the lowest rates of female labor force participation (i.e.,
the percentage of women who are employed or are actively seeking employment) in the world, a
phenomenon that has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic (see textbox on
“Implications of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Women in MENA” above). In 2019, the regional
average female labor force participation rate (29.2%) was 18 percentage points below the global
average for women (47.3%), ranging from 6.0% in Yemen to 59.6% in Israel.30 On average,
women participated in the labor force at less than half the rate of men in the region (75.8%).
Women’s unpaid domestic and agricultural labor, as well as paid work in the informal economy,
is seldom quantified through official statistics. The greatest gaps between male and female
participation are seen in three countries that face severe instability and conflict in addition to
economic woes: the labor forces in Yemen, Iraq, and Syria have a gender difference of nearly 60
percentage points (see Figure 5).


25 See, for example, Esther Duflo, “Women Empowerment and Economic Development,” Journal of Economic
Literature
, vol. 50, no. 4 (2012), pp. 1051-1079.
26 The World Bank, World Development Report 2012: Gender Equality and Development, 2012; The World Bank,
Opening Doors: Gender Equality and Development in the Middle East and North Africa, 2013.
27 Gaëlle Ferrant and Alexandre Kolev, “The economic cost of gender-based discrimination in social institutions,”
OECD Development Centre, Issues Paper, June 2016.
28 Rabah Arezki and Ha Nguyen, “Coping with a Dual Shock: COVID-19 and Oil Prices,” The World Bank, April 14,
2020. See also, Larry Luxnor, “COVID-19 could set back Mideast Economies for Years,” New Atlanticist, July 14,
2020.
29 The World Bank, “Saudi women rising up in business in line with Vision 2030,” March 11, 2020; Raya Jalabi,
“Saudi women barrel into workforce in changing kingdom,” Reuters, November 4, 2021.
30 ILO modeled estimates for 2019 (latest available), retrieved November 2021.
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The “MENA Paradox”
In what has been referred to as the “MENA paradox,” female labor force participation remains low across the
region despite rising female education attainment (see Figure 5).31 The World Bank argues that the region’s
conservative gender norms, legal and institutional barriers, and a lack of incentives and opportunities generated by
local economic structures (e.g. social safety nets, parental leave, reliance on oil production) drive low rates of
women’s participation in the public sphere.32 Some observers have posited that the mismatch is demand-side
driven, as young women have increasingly entered the workforce at a time when job opportunities happen to have
stagnated for both men and women.33 Others argue that the paradox can be explained by a trifecta of constraints
on supply-side factors, namely discriminatory gender norms, attitudes, and regulations; a lack of financial and
business services for women; and limited access to skil s, knowledge, markets, and networks.34 Surveys done by
Arab Barometer in 2020/2021 found that publics across the region attribute women’s low participation in the
labor force to structural rather than cultural barriers, citing a lack of childcare options, a lack of transportation,
and low wages as the main barriers to women working.35
Prior to the pandemic, the World Bank had noted that a failure to address the high unemployment
rates among youth and women could “deter economic recovery and hamper long-term growth
prospects in the region.”36 High rates of unemployment and under-employment (reflecting those
who are actively seeking work), particularly among young people, continue to challenge MENA
governments (see Figure 5). The average unemployment rate for women in the region (15.5%)
was more than twice the regional average for men (6.7%). Youth unemployment, while a
challenge for men as well as women, was worse for young women in all the MENA countries: on
average, female youth unemployment was nearly 18 percentage points higher than male youth
unemployment (36.1% compared to 18.4%).37 Economic frustration was one of the driving forces
behind the Arab Spring uprisings in 2011, and renewed protests in Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, and
Lebanon in 2019 and 2020 again brought the issue to the fore.38
The picture has not been uniformly negative: between 2000 and 2018, over 9 million women
entered the region’s labor force.39 Some observers also point to increased female entrepreneurship
in some Gulf countries as positive economic developments for women. In 2021, Saudi Arabia and
Oman were found to have more women entrepreneurs than men.40

31 ILO, “High female education and low labour participation rates: IFAD and ILO tackle the ‘MENA gender paradox,’”
ILO News, July 19, 2017.
32 The World Bank, Opening Doors: Gender Equality and Development in the Middle East and North Africa, 2013.
33 Ragui Assaad et al., “Explaining the MENA Paradox: Rising Educational Attainment, Yet Stagnant Female Labor
Force Participation,” IZA Institute of Labor Economics, Discussion Paper No. 11385, March 2018.
34 Drew Gardiner, “Attitudes and Norms on Women’s Employment in the MENA region,” ILO, March 2018.
35 Arab Barometer, Wave VI Regional Report: July 2020 - April 2021, November 2021.
36 Rabah Arezki et al., “A New Economy for the Middle East and North Africa,” The World Bank, Middle East and
North Africa Economic Monitor
, October 2018.
37 CRS calculations using ILO-modeled estimates from 2019, last updated October 28, 2021.
38 See for example Jeremy Bowen, “Is a new Arab Spring unfolding in the Middle East?” BBC News, October 29,
2019; “Ten Years of Pan-Arab Protests: Understanding the New Dynamics of Change,” Wilson Center Event, October
7, 2020.
39 Saadia Zahidi, Fifty Million Rising: The New Generation of Working Women Transforming the Muslim World, (New
York, NY: Nation Books, 2018), p. 7.
40 Niels Bosma et al., “Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2020/2021 Global Report,” Global Entrepreneurship Research
Association, London Business School, 2021.
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Figure 5. Selected Economic Indicators for Women in the MENA region

Source: Labor force participation rate and unemployment rate are International Labor Organization (ILO)-
modeled estimates for 2019, downloaded from the World Bank data portal October 2021. GDP data are also
available from the World Bank for 2018. Mean years of schooling data are from the U.N. Development Program
(UNDP), Human Development Report 2019, Gender Development Index, July 15, 2019.
Notes: UNDP defines mean years of schooling as “the average number of years of education received by people
ages 25 and older, converted from educational attainment levels using official durations of each level.” The most
recent GDP per capita data for Syria is from 2010 and from 2017 for Iran.
Political Representation
Various studies have found that women’s empowerment as political leaders is correlated with
greater government responsiveness to citizen needs, increased cooperation across party and ethnic
lines, decreased levels of corruption, lower levels of civil conflict, and a reduced risk of civil war
relapse.41 Women are underrepresented in political positions and institutions in the MENA region
to a greater extent when compared to other regions globally.42 For example, MENA countries
perform below the world average when it comes to the percentage of seats held by women in

41 See, for example, David Dollar et al., “Are Women Really the ‘Fairer’ Sex? Corruption and Women in
Government,” Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, vol. 49 (2001), pp. 423-429; Georgina Waylen, “Gender
and Transitions: What do We Know?” Democratization, vol. 10, no. 1 (2003), pp. 157-178; Erik Melander, “Gender
Equality and Intrastate Armed Conflict,” International Studies International Studies Quarterly, vol. 49, no. 4 (2005),
pp. 695–714; Jacqueline Demeritt et al., “Female Participation and Civil War Relapse,” Civil Wars, vol. 16, no. 3
(2014).
42 See CRS Report R45483, Women in National Governments Around the Globe: Fact Sheet, by Susan G. Chesser.
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legislative bodies: 10.4% of seats are held by women compared to 24.3% globally and 23.6% in
the United States (see Figure 6). Moreover, the region performs poorly on measures of political
rights and civil liberties.43
Monarchies and authoritarian or hybrid political systems may create some opportunities for
women to participate in legislative bodies, but ultimately may not be responsive to elected
representatives. Some observers argue that authoritarian leaders rhetorically uphold initiatives on
women’s rights to appear more inclusive and divert attention away from repressive behavior or to
bolster their legitimacy abroad.44 For example, the Saudi monarchy recognized women’s right to
vote in 2011 and expanded women’s participation in the advisory, appointed Shura Council.
Saudi Arabia has recognized some additional women’s rights (such as the right to drive) since
2017, but the government has detained and tried women activists and maintains some
“guardianship” limits on women’s behavior.45 In Tunisia, President Kaïs Saïed’s appointment in
2021 of Najla Bouden Ramadhane—the first woman to hold the post of prime minister in Tunisia
or elsewhere in the Arab world—came after Saïed suspended much of the constitution, asserted
the authority to govern by decree, and curtailed the independence and powers of the position.46
Some governments and political parties have attempted to improve women’s representation in
legislative bodies by implementing gender quotas. Eight countries in the region have some form
of quota to ensure women’s representation, and those countries have more women seated in lower
houses of the legislature than the MENA average (see Figure 6). Arab Barometer findings
indicate that more than two-thirds of those surveyed support women’s quotas.47 In 2020, Egypt
became the most recent country in the region to implement gender quotas for parliamentary seats:
25% of the lower chamber seats and 10% of the upper chamber seats are now reserved for
women.48
Recent elections in some parts of the region have seen women winning fewer seats than in
previous elections. In Tunisia, women lost 25 seats in the 2019 parliamentary elections compared
to 2014.49 In Israel, where some political parties have voluntarily instituted gender quotas, women
held 35 seats in the 120-seat 20th Knesset (elected in 2015), compared to 29 elected in April 2019,
28 in the September 2019 re-run of elections, and 30 in the third and fourth electoral re-runs, in
March 2020 and March 2021.50 Parliamentary elections in Algeria (2021), Jordan (2020), and
Kuwait (2020) resulted in women holding fewer seats, while elections in Morocco (2021) and
Egypt (2020) resulted in slight increases in the number of women representatives.

43 As of January 2021, Freedom House ranked Israel and Tunisia as “free”; Lebanon, Kuwait, and Morocco as “partly
free”; and Jordan, Algeria, Iraq, Qatar, Oman, Egypt, UAE, Iran, Bahrain, Yemen, Libya, Saudi Arabia, and Syria as
“not free.” Freedom House, Freedom in the World 2021.
44 See for example: Gabrielle Bardall, “Autocrats use feminism to undermine democracy,” Policy Options, October 30,
2019; Hind Ahmed Zaki, “El-Sissi’s Women? Shifting gender discourses and the limits of state feminism,”
Égypte/Monde Arabe, vol. 13 (2015), pp. 39-53.
45 See “Women’s Rights” in CRS Report RL33533, Saudi Arabia: Background and U.S. Relations, by Christopher M.
Blanchard.
46CRS Report RS21666, Tunisia: In Brief, by Alexis Arieff.
47 Kathrin Thomas, “Women’s Rights in the Middle East and North Africa,” Arab Barometer, August 2019.
48 Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, “Egypt,” Gender Quotas Database, updated October 21, 2021.
49 The electoral law in recent cycles has required that parliamentary candidate lists alternate between men and women
(meaning that any party that wins more than one seat in a given district will send at least one woman to parliament).
The loss in seats for women may be attributed, in part, to the election of a more fractious parliament in 2019, in which
relatively few parties won more than one seat. Composition of the 2019 parliament available at
https://majles.marsad.tn/2019/fr/assemblee/.
50 Ruth Eglash, “Four Israeli women who’ve broken new political ground,” Washington Post, August 7, 2020.
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Figure 6. Political Representation of Women
Percentage of seats held by women in parliament/consultative body and date of women’s suffrage

Source: Compiled by CRS using data from the Monthly Ranking of Women in National parliaments published by
the Inter-Parliamentary Union, and the Gender Quotas Database published by the International Institute for
Democracy and Electoral Assistance, as of November 15, 2021.
Notes: In UAE, half of the members of the Federal National Council are appointed, half are elected by electoral
col eges consisting of voters selected by emirs of each emirate. In Saudi Arabia, the Shura Council is chosen by
the King, with 20% of seats reserved for women since 2013.
Where women are elected to political bodies, they may encounter additional barriers to political
participation. For example, a 2015 study found that even though women held 16% of seats in the
Libyan parliament (due in part to gender quotas), female members of parliament were challenged
by practices such as holding meetings late at night when it is not socially acceptable for women to
be out or in places considered unsafe for women to attend. They have also been subject to verbal
intimidation by their male counterparts.51
Obstacles to women’s representation may also include cultural beliefs about a woman’s place in
politics, though there appears to be a range of views within the region, and those may be
changing over time. A 2016 public opinion poll in Arab countries indicated that men, and to a
lesser extent women, view men as superior political leaders. At the same time, the poll also found
that a majority of men and a larger majority of women in each country except Algeria agreed that
an Arab woman could become the head of state of a Muslim-majority country.52
As women gain greater representation in political bodies, however, they may still hold less power
than men, a distinction that is sometimes lost in quantitative measures of participation. An index
developed by the congressionally chartered Wilson Center to measure women’s leadership in the
MENA region found in 2020 that when women led top government departments there, they were
four times more likely to be found in what are considered traditionally “feminized” sectors

51 U.N. Development Program Libya, “Women, Peace and Security in Libya: Comparative Summary of the WPS
Baseline Study, Phase I and Phase II,” 2015.
52 Arab Barometer, “Views of Arab Women as Political Leaders,” February 11, 2019.
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Women in the Middle East and North Africa: Issues for Congress

focused on various forms of caretaking, such as socio-cultural ministries, rather than sectors with
larger budgets and greater influence over policy areas such as defense, finance, energy, or
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large budgets and greater influence over policy areas such as defense, finance, energy or justice.55

In 2015, the UAE elected Dr. Amal Al Qubaisi Speaker of the Federal National Council, the first woman to
serve as speaker of a legislative body in the Arab world.

In 2018, Sarwa Abdul Wahid became the first woman to run for president in Iraq.

In 2019, Lebanon’s Raya Al Hassan was appointed the first female interior minister in the Arab world.

In 2019, Princess Reema bint Bandar Al Saud became the first female ambassador to represent Saudi
Arabia.

In 2019, two women, Selma El oumi Rekik and Abir Moussi, ran in Tunisia’s presidential elections.

In 2020, Lebanon’s Zeina Akar Adra became the first female Minister of Defense in the Arab world.

In 2020, Israelis elected 33 women to the Knesset, including “the first Ethiopian-born Knesset member to
become a government minister, the first female ultra-Orthodox Jewish lawmaker and minister, the first
female Knesset member from the Druze religious community, and the first to wear a Muslim hijab.”57

In 2021, Najla Bouden was named the first female Prime Minister in Tunisia and in the Arab world.
Conflict and Displacement58
Compared with most of the rest of the world, the MENA region experienced a disproportionate
share of conflict and population displacement from 2011 to 2020.59 Prolonged situations of
conflict and displacement have specific implications for sexual and gender-based violence

53 Merissa Khurma et al., “Ready to Lead: Understanding Women’s Public Leadership in the Middle East and North
Africa,” The Wilson Center, March 2020, p. 20.
54 Arab Barometer, “Views of Arab Women as Political Leaders,” February 11, 2019.
55 Merissa Khurma et al., “Ready to Lead: Understanding Women’s Public Leadership in the Middle East and North
Africa,” The Wilson Center, March 2020, p. 20.
56 CRS Report R45483, Women in National Governments Around the Globe: Fact Sheet, by Susan G. Chesser. Saudi
women did not actually vote until the 2015 municipal elections.
57 Ruth Eglash, “Four Israeli women who’ve broken new political ground,” The Washington Post, August 7, 2020.
58 For background on global humanitarian issues, see CRS In Focus IF10568, Overview of the Global Humanitarian
and Displacement Crisis
, by Rhoda Margesson.
59 Data from the Uppsala Conflict Data Program suggests that 59% of the world’s battle deaths took place in the
MENA region from 2011-2020 (available through the World Bank data portal). United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) estimates that 28% of the world’s refugees and internally displaced persons in 2020 originated in
the MENA region. The region accounts for about 6% of the total global population. UNHCR, “Global Trends 2020:
Excel Annex tables,” data as of December 31, 2021; U.N. Population Division, “World Population Prospects 2019,”
data as of July 1 2019.
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(SGBV), girls’ access to education, rates of child, early, and forced marriage (CEFM), maternal
and child health, and the region’s economic growth.60
As Figure 7 illustrates, the countries suffering from conflict and humanitarian crises (Iraq, Syria,
Libya, and Yemen) also have some of the highest rates of intimate partner violence in the region.
Additionally, in some cases, SGBV has been used as a weapon of war. For example, conflict-
related sexual violence has been documented in Iraq, Syria, Libya, and Yemen:
 At the height of its power, the Islamic State (which controlled areas of Iraq and Syria
between 2014 and 2019) “discriminated against women, girls, and sexual minorities
as a matter of policy.”61 The group was notably implicated in genocide, crimes
against humanity, and war crimes against the Yazidis, an ethnic group indigenous to
Iraq, Syria, and Turkey. Yazidi women and girls as young as nine were sold into
sexual slavery by IS fighters.62 Abuses against women attributed to IS combatants
also included stonings, executions, forced marriages, restrictions on movement, and
strict dress codes enforced by lashings.
 Parties to the Syrian conflict have allegedly used sexual violence as a tool to “instill
fear, humiliate and punish or, in the case of terrorist groups, as part of their enforced
social order.”63 The United Nations has alleged that rapes and other acts of sexual
violence carried out by government forces have “formed part of a widespread and
systematic attack directed against a civilian population, and amount to crimes against
humanity.”64 Syrian refugee women have also noted that intimate partner violence
has intensified as the lack of employment opportunities for men have increased
frustration, tension, and violence in the home. Recourse to harmful coping
mechanisms, such as child marriage for girls as young as 10 years old, has reportedly
increased in light of physical and financial insecurity faced particularly by those
internally displaced.65
 In Yemen, the United Nations recorded increased reporting of sexual violence in
2018, including cases of physical or sexual assault, rape, and sexual slavery, noting
that “while a few cases are directly attributable to parties to the conflict, most are the
result of increased risks that women and children face, against a backdrop of pre-
existing gender inequality, exacerbated by the chronic incapacity of Government
institutions to protect civilians.”66 In 2019 and 2020, the U.N. noted further reports of
conflict-related sexual violence, particularly in displacement and detention settings.
 The U.N. reports that in Libya, a “climate of insecurity has allowed transnational
smugglers, traffickers and armed groups to perpetrate rape, sexual harassment of
detainees and trafficking of migrants and asylum seekers with impunity. State actors,
including corrections officials, have also been implicated.”67 As part of resolution
2542 (2020), the Security Council called for women and child protection advisers to
be deployed with the U.N. Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) to monitor and
report abuses and violations of human rights and violations of international
humanitarian law, including sexual violence in conflict.
Child, Early, and Forced Marriages (CEFM)68
UNICEF estimates that about 700,000 child marriages annually have taken place in the MENA region in recent
years; about 1 in 5 girls in the MENA region were married before their 18th birthdays.69 Rates of child, early, and
forced marriages in MENA had decreased between 1990 and 2010, but progress reportedly has stalled since then.
Experts are concerned about the effect the COVID-19 pandemic may have on efforts to reduce child marriage,
both in terms of the ability to implement interventions due to social distancing measures, and in terms of
increased poverty in vulnerable communities, a key driver of CEFM.70 In crisis situations, parents may see child
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marriage as a way to relieve economic difficulties by transferring the cost of supporting a girl to another family or
through dowry payments, and may believe that marriage wil protect girls from violence.71 Studies suggest that
CEFM generally rises in conflict-affected countries and protracted displacement conditions. Negative trends for
girls in Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Yemen, il ustrate this vulnerability.
In Iraq, CEFM increased from 15% in 1997 to 24% by 2016, including 5% of marriages involving children
younger than 15;72
In Syria, child marriage rates were reportedly four times higher among displaced Syrian refugees in 2019
than among Syrians before the crisis;73
In Libya, previously ranked among the region’s lowest rates of child marriage (2%), the number of child
brides reportedly rose in areas that were control ed or influenced by the Islamic State;74 and
In Yemen, a September 2016 study found that in governorates with high numbers of internally displaced
persons, 44% of marriages reportedly involved girls under the age of 15.75

60 See, for example, Oxfam, “Factsheet: Women, Peace and Security in the Middle East and North Africa Region,”
February 2016; UNHCR, “Turn the Tide: Refugee Education in Crisis,” August 2018; Christelle Cazabat, Women and
Girls in Displacement
, International Displacement Monitoring Center, March 2020.
61 U.N. Human Rights Council, “‘I lost my dignity’: Sexual and gender-based violence in the Syrian Arab Republic,”
A/HRC/37/CRP.3, March 2018.
62 U.N. Human Rights Council, “‘They Came to Destroy’: ISIS Crimes Against the Yazidis,” A/HRC/32/CRP.2, June
15, 2016.
63 U.N. Human Rights Council, “‘I lost my dignity.”
64 Ibid, p. 1.
65 U.N. Security Council, Report of the Secretary General on Conflict-Related Sexual Violence, S/2021/312, March 30,
2021.
66 U.N. Security Council, Conflict Related Sexual Violence: Report of the United Nations Secretary-General,
S/2019/280, March 29, 2019; S/2020/487, June 3, 2020; and S/2021/312, March 30, 2021.
67 U.N. Security Council, Conflict Related Sexual Violence: Report of the United Nations Secretary-General,
S/2021/312, March 30, 2021.
68 There is no universal definition of child or forced marriage. The United Nations offers the following definition of
CEFM: “Child marriage, or early marriage, is any marriage where at least one of the parties is under 18 years of age.
Forced marriages are marriages in which one and/or both parties have not personally expressed their full and free
consent to the union. A child marriage is considered to be a form of forced marriage, given that one and/or both parties
have not expressed full, free and informed consent.” This naming convention has not been universally adopted, so this
report uses the term “child marriage” when reflecting the conventions of the underlying sourcing. U.N. Office of the
High Commissioner for Human Rights, “Child, early and forced marriage, including in humanitarian settings,” last
updated 2020.
69 UNICEF, “Child Marriage in the context of COVID-19,” June 2021.
70 UNFPA, “Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Family Planning and Ending Gender-based Violence, Female
Genital Mutilation and Child Marriage,” Interim Technical Note Information, April 27, 2020; Joud Monla-Hassan and
Mona Yacoubian, “COVID Will Lead to More Child Marriage—What Can Be Done?” United States Institute of Peace,
August 12, 2020.
71 Girls Not Brides, “Why It Happens?” last updated 2021.
72 Gilgamesh Nabeel and Jacob Wirtschafter, “Early marriage figures for Iraq are startling. Child advocates worry it
could rise even more,” Public Radio International, August 13, 2018.
73 U.N. Human Rights Council, “Report of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab
Republic,” A/HRC/42/51, August 15, 2019.
74 Farzaneh Roudi-Fahimi and Shaimaa Ibrahim, “Ending Child Marriage in the Arab Region,” policy brief, PRB, May
2013; Umberto Bacchi, “ISIS in Libya: Child Brides Boom in Derna as Record Number of Girls Married Off to Jihadi
Fighters,” International Business Times, May 11, 2015.
75 UNICEF, “Falling Through the Cracks: The Children of Yemen,” March 2017.
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Figure 7. Conflict, Displacement, and Gender-based Violence

Source: Created by CRS using battle death and intimate partner violence data from GIWPS and PRIO, WPS
Index 2021
; displacement data from UNHCR, Refugee Population Statistics Database, June 2021; child marriage
and literacy rate data from WEF, Global Gender Gap Report 2021 (child marriage data from 2019; literacy data
from 2018).
Notes: The WPS Index measures intimate partner violence by the percentage of women who experienced
physical or sexual violence committed by their intimate partner in the previous 12 months. The Global Gender
Gap Report approximates the rate of child marriage by using percentage of girls aged 15–19 years who are or
have ever been married, divorced, widowed, or in an informal union as reported in U.N. World Marriage Data
(2017).
Conflict Resolution and Peace Negotiations
Studies have shown that the inclusion of women in peace processes can help to reduce conflict
and improve long-term prospects for peace.76 A 2015 study estimated that the participation of
women and civil society groups in a peace negotiation makes a peace agreement 64% less likely
to fail and 35% more likely to last at least 15 years.77 In the MENA context, women have been
underrepresented in most formal efforts to resolve the region’s three largest ongoing wars in
Libya, Syria, and Yemen, despite attempts by some international actors to involve women in these
processes. Women have nevertheless continued peacebuilding efforts through civil society and
grassroots organizations. In May 2020, over 90 Arab women’s civil society organizations joined

76 See, for example, Maxwell Adjei, “Women’s participation in peace processes: a review of literature,” Journal of
Peace Education
, vol. 16, no. 2 (2019), pp. 133-154.
77 Marie O’Reilly, Andrea Ó Súilleabháin, and Thania Paffenholz, Re-Imagining Peacemaking: Women’s Roles in
Peace Processes
, International Peace Institute, June 2015.
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the U.N. Secretary-General in calling for a global ceasefire to address the COVID-19 pandemic.78
Women’s peacebuilding organizations also have mobilized to stop the spread of the virus and
assist affected communities.
In Libya, peace efforts have not been inclusive of Libyan women.79 Despite the active
involvement of nearly one in five women in the 2011 revolution and repeated calls from the U.N.
Security Council for the “the full, equal and effective participation of women in all activities
relating to the democratic transition, conflict resolution and peacebuilding,” formal peace talks
have not included Libyan women. 80 Women peacebuilders are active in the country, however. For
example, the Libyan Women’s Network for Peacebuilding (Network), created with support from
UN Women in July 2019, has been convening virtually to press for a ceasefire, advocate for
imprisoned activists, and condemn violence against women in politics. After the COVID-19
pandemic emerged, Network members repurposed their networks to spread information, collect
personal protective equipment (such as masks) for health care workers, and advocate for the
humanitarian needs of vulnerable groups.81
In Syria, throughout multiple rounds of peace talks between 2012 and 2017 to resolve the Syrian
war, Syrian women were significantly underrepresented in the process, despite repeated calls by
the international community for more women to be included in government and opposition
delegations. Four years into the U.N.-sponsored talks in 2016, the then-U.N. Special Envoy,
Staffan de Mistura, created a Syrian Women’s Advisory Board to support women’s participation
in the peace process; the Board sent a delegation of 12 women as third party observers to
negotiations in Geneva.82 In 2017, women comprised 15% of negotiators of the U.N.-sponsored
peace talks.83 That same year, Syrian women opposition politicians and activists formed the
Syrian Women Political Movement to develop a shared vision for a peace process inclusive of
women and grassroots activists. The group has advocated that all decision-making processes
include at least 30% women, among other demands.84 Women hold about 30% of seats in the 150-
member Constitutional Committee, created in late 2019 with 50 participants each nominated from
the government, opposition, and civil society, and 30% of the 45-member constitution drafting
committee.85
In Yemen, women had been making progress towards greater representation in decision-making,
but since the outbreak of war in 2014, have largely been excluded from formal peace
negotiations. Women held 30% of seats and chaired three of the nine committees on the National
Dialogue Conference (NDC) called to broker a transition from the longtime rule of President Ali

78 UN Women, “Women’s organizations in the Arab States region join UN Secretary-General António Guterres’s call
for ceasefire in the face of COVID-19,” Press Release, May 29, 2020.
79 Emily Burchfield, “How the exclusion of women has cost Libya,” The Atlantic Council, November 26, 2019.
80 Rola Abdul-Latif, “Libya Status of Women Survey 2013,” International Foundation for Electoral Systems,
September 2013; U.N. Security Resolution 2273 (2016); U.N. Security Council Resolution 2376 (2017); U.N. Security
Resolution 2434, (2018); U.N. Security Resolution 2486 (2019); U.N. Security Council Resolution 2542, (2020).
81 UN Women, “Connected by their phones, women peacebuilders lead COVID-19 prevention efforts across Libya,”
June 19, 2020.
82 Council on Foreign Relations, “Women’s Participation in Peace Processes: Syria,” January 30, 2019.
83 Bela Kapur, “Syrian Women in Political Processes: Literature Review,” The Kvinna till Kvinnna Foundation, May
2017.
84 Sheila Goishabib, “Syrian Women’s Political Movement Releases Three Policy Papers,” Women’s International
League for Peace and Freedom, July 1, 2019.
85 Remarks by Jomana Qaddour at Middle East Institute event, “The Role of Women in Syria’s Future,” November 21,
2019.
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Abdullah Saleh to President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi in 2011. A new draft constitution that built
on NDC recommendations would have secured the recognition of women as equal citizens and
independent individuals, a 30% quota in decision-making positions, and a legal minimum
marriage age of marriage of 18. The constitution was never ratified, however, and rebel Houthi
leaders’ rejection of the draft constitution was one of the triggers of the current crisis.
Women have been minimally involved in subsequent peace negotiations to resolve the conflict
with the Houthis.86 U.N. Special Envoy Martin Griffiths reportedly invited eight women to join
the peace talks in Sweden in 2018, though only one woman was present at the negotiation table.87
In December 2019, the Prime Minister of the Hadi government approved Yemen’s National
Action Plan for Women, Peace, and Security. The plan reportedly states that women’s
participation should be set at no less than 30% in all stages of the peace process, though critics
have raised concerns that the plan lacks specifics on “budgets, resource allocation, monitoring
and evaluation mechanisms or accountability measures” and ignores the outcomes of the NDC as
a national point of reference.88 In October 2020, a women-led civil society organization, the
Abductees’ Mothers Association, helped to facilitate the largest prisoner exchange of the Yemen
war in October 2020.89
Radicalization, Terrorism, and Violent Extremism
Some studies have linked the status of women at the household level to the resilience of a state
and community to violence and violent extremism.90 In some cases, women may be uniquely
positioned as “mitigators” of terrorism, both as “predictors” and “preventers.”91 Governments in
the region have invested resources in programs that involve women in countering violent
extremism. At the same time, women can be actors as well as victims in the commission of acts of
terrorism. Terrorist groups have tasked female members with concealing explosive devices,
relaying communications, ferrying funds, and the like, assuming that women are less likely to be
searched or otherwise draw attention from security forces. Violent extremist groups in MENA
have recruited women to support and participate in their operational, intelligence gathering, and
administrative activities, even as they have imposed severe restrictions and punishments on
women.
From its inception, the Islamic State used women to recruit and fundraise, and to provide support
and companionship to male fighters. One estimate suggested that women accounted for up to
13% (4,761) of the total 41,490 foreigners who were recorded to have traveled to territory under
the control of the Islamic State from 2014 to 2019.92 According to a journalist who covered the

86 Neha Wadekar, “Women Want to Put Yemen Back Together Again,” Foreign Policy, November 27, 2018.
87 Valette, Protection, Participation and Potential, January 2019.
88 Maha Awadh, “Unfulfilled Ambition: Yemen’s National Action Plan for Women Leaves Much to be Desired,”
Enheduanna Blog, Wilson Center, April 9, 2020. The plan has not been officially published and CRS has not reviewed
a translated draft.
89 Lauren Mellows, “Abductees’ Mothers Association: On the Front Lines of Yemen’s Prisoner Swap,” International
Civil Society Action Network, November 13, 2020.
90 Krista Couture, “A Gendered Approach to Countering Violent Extremism: Lessons Learned From Women in
Peacebuilding and Conflict Prevention Applied Successfully in Bangladesh and Morocco,” Brookings Institution,
Policy Paper, July 2014; Valerie Hudson et. al., The First Political Order: How Sex Shapes Governance and National
Security Worldwide
(New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2020).
91 Jamille Bigio and Rachel Vogelstein, “Women and Terrorism: Hidden Threats, Forgotten Partners,” Council on
Foreign Relations, Discussion Paper, May 2019.
92 Joana Cook and Gina Vale, “From Daesh to ‘Diaspora’ II: The Challenges Posed by Women and Minors after the
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fighting in Iraq, some women joined the Islamic State in operational roles even as the group
experienced territorial losses, driven by “revenge, need, or both” to retaliate against coalition and
Iraqi military operations.93 The group imposed harsh restrictions on women under its control. At a
House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing in 2015, numerous witnesses testified about the
mistreatment of women alongside the often-successful efforts to lure foreign women to the area
and the group. The aspects of brutality included, among other forms of oppression, widespread
sexual violence, trafficking, slavery, and murder.94 The hearing also highlighted the role of
women in countering the Islamic State, including all-female battalions of Kurdish women
fighting on the front lines, and female first-responders rescuing women from the group.95
Despite having lost most of the territory that it previously controlled in Iraq and Syria, the Islamic
State continues to pose a threat, including with regard to its radicalization of women. In
particular, experts and U.S. government officials repeatedly have expressed concern about the
radicalization of women residing in camps for people displaced from territory formerly held by
the Islamic State, such as Al Hol.96 A U.N. assessment in August 2021 estimated that 92% of the
more than 60,000 then-inhabitants of Al Hol were women and children.97 An unknown number of
the women remaining in Al Hol and similar camps are family members and/or former supporters
of IS combatants, or are former IS combatants themselves.98
Experts have argued that in order to be effective, efforts to counter terrorism need to recognize
the potential roles women can play in recruitment, messaging, administration, and operations (as
the extremist groups do), as well as the roles women can play in countering extremism.99 Several
MENA governments have taken steps in this direction. For example, the State Department’s 2019
Country Reports on Terrorism (the most recent available) noted that Algeria recognizes the
“crucial role” of women in its efforts to counter extremism, highlighting the female clerics who
work with young girls, mothers, and prisoners.100 The report also noted that in Jordan, “officials
regularly engage experts on topics such as the role of women and girls in terrorism prevention.”
From a U.S. government perspective, the State Department witness at a November, 2021 hearing

Fall of the Caliphate,” U.S. Military Academy Combating Terrorism Center, CTC Sentinel, vol. 12, no. 6, July 2019.
93 For example, Iraqi security forces reportedly raped, harassed, and stole from some women after expelling IS fighters.
According to reports, some women joined IS to seek revenge against the security forces. Some also felt pressure to join
the group due to lack of income and “terrible” living conditions. Vera Mironova, “Is the Future of ISIS Female?” New
York Times
, February 20, 2019.
94 U.S. Congress, House Foreign Affairs Committee, hearing, Women Under ISIS Rule: From Brutality to Recruitment,
114th Congress, July 29, 2015.
95 See also Gayle Tzemach Lemmon, Daughters of Kobani, (New York: Penguin Press, 2021).
96 See, for example, Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Near East, South Asia, Central Asia and
Counterterrorism, Iraq: A Crossroads of U.S. Policy, hearing, 116th Cong., 1st sess., July 16, 2020; Julia Hurley,
“Coronavirus and ISIS: The Challenge of Repatriation from Al-Hol,” United States Institute of Peace, May 28, 2020.
97 U.N. Human Rights Council, “Report of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab
Republic,” A/HRC/48/70, August 13, 2021.
98 The residents are reportedly divided between those who remain supportive of the Islamic State and others who regret
their association, with the former group reportedly using repressive and violent means, including killings, to enforce
their interpretation of religious rules within the camp. John Saleh, “The Women of ISIS and the Al-Hol Camp,” Fikra
Forum, August 2, 2021.
99 See, for example, the report mandated in Section 1047 of the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA):
CNA, Understanding Gender and Violent Extremism, March 2021. See also, USAID, Policy For Countering Violent
Extremism Through Development Assistance
, April 2020; Jamille Bigio and Rachel Vogelstein, Women and Terrorism:
Hidden Threats, Forgotten Partners
, Council on Foreign Relations, May 2019.
100 U.S. Department of State, Country Reports on Terrorism 2019, June 24, 2020.
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on the Counterterrorism Bureau told Congress that women play an important role in all aspects of
countering violent extremism.101
Raising a different perspective on women and the fight against terror, a U.N. Human Rights
Council report from March 2021 cautioned that many counter-terrorism policies and postures
may harm women: “Counter-terrorism policy and practice in multiple countries deliberately
targets women human rights defenders and those claiming sexual, reproductive and equality
rights for women and girls and uses the full force of the security state to shut down and choke
their claims.”102 This dynamic arguably is an element of the larger, long-standing dilemma in the
MENA region of balancing seemingly competing U.S. policy goals of partnering with some
autocratic governments on the one hand and promoting democracy and human rights on the
other.103
Considerations for Congress
Members may take into account the following issues and questions as they conduct oversight of
and consider U.S. policy addressing both the status of women in MENA countries and broader
security and policy priorities in the region.
Resources and priorities. In a context of competing domestic and foreign policy
priorities and finite resources, to what extent, if any, should U.S. foreign policy,
foreign assistance, and military cooperation be directed to address gender imbalances
in the MENA region? If so, how can this be done most effectively? Are there specific
countries or lines of effort that should be prioritized over others, and, if so, for what
reasons? How has USCENTCOM implemented the Women, Peace, and Security Act
and what resources has it allocated to support the goals of the act?
Foreign aid. What is the impact of U.S. efforts to advance the WPS Act on the safety
and well-being of women in the MENA region and on the promotion of broader
security and the resolution of conflict? What is the impact of U.S. efforts to support
women’s economic and legal empowerment in the MENA region?
Unintended consequences. Do some types of aid or cooperation with MENA
governments on security issues inadvertently contribute to harming women’s rights
or well-being? Are there ways to mitigate against such damage?
Conditionality. What are the pros and cons of conditioning U.S. financial support for
and security cooperation with authoritarian states on respect for women’s rights and
gender equality? What metrics would be appropriate for gauging progress made by
these regimes?
Effectiveness. How do the Departments of State and Defense and USAID seek to
measure program effectiveness? Which types of policy approaches and foreign

101 U.S. Congress, House Foreign Affairs Committee, Subcommittee on the Middle East, North Africa and Global
Terrorism, hearing, The FY22 Budget: State Department Counterterrorism Bureau, 117th Congress, November 17,
2021.
102 U.N. Human Rights Council, “UN expert calls on States to end counter-terrorism policies and practices that harm
women, girls and family,” March 4, 2021. The text of the full report, Human rights impact of counter-terrorism and
countering (violent) extremism policies and practices on the rights of women, girls and the family,
January 22, 2021, is
available at https://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/A_HRC_46_36_E.pdf.
103 For one discussion of this tension see Thomas Carothers and Benjamin Press, “Navigating the Democracy-Security
Dilemma in U.S. Foreign Policy: Lessons from Egypt, India, and Turkey,” Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, November 4, 2021.
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assistance programs appear to have been the most effective in improving conditions
for women? What have been the effects of U.S. programs in specific MENA
countries?
Congressional mandates. What are the benefits and drawbacks of using legislation
to mandate the incorporation of gender elements into broader foreign policy
initiatives, foreign assistance programs, and military cooperation activities?
Best practices. To what extent, if any, are U.S. government agencies sharing best
practices among themselves and with other international actors? Would congressional
efforts to encourage women’s participation in peace negotiations in Afghanistan be
applicable to MENA conflicts such as those in Syria, Yemen, and Libya?
Cultural sensitivities and resistance to change. How can U.S. and international
assistance and programs be structured to maximize local ownership of initiatives for
women and girls and minimize the perception of outside interference?
Coordination with international efforts. What programs and initiatives do other
governments and regional and multilateral organizations have for addressing gender
issues in the MENA region? Are there gender issues in the region that would be most
efficiently or effectively addressed through multilateral organizations, as opposed to
unilateral U.S. efforts? How well coordinated are global efforts, and what
opportunities are there for greater coordination and/or burden-sharing?
COVID-19. Are there ways to target U.S. policy and/or foreign assistance that might
help mitigate the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on women?

Author Information

Zoe Danon
Sarah R. Collins
Coordinator of Research Planning
Research Assistant



Acknowledgments

The authors would like to extend their gratitude to Amber Wilhelm for her help in producing all of the
graphics found in this report, to Susan G. Chesser and Sara Tharakan for their contributions to the report, as
well as to the many people who read and commented on versions of this report, including Luisa
Blanchfield, Mallary Stouffer, Alexis Arieff, Chris Blanchard, Jeremy Sharp, Kenneth Katzman, Clayton
Thomas, Emily Morgenstern, and Rhoda Margesson.
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Disclaimer
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under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in
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