Skip to main content
  • EN
Megamenu Row 1 Slot 1
  • Statehood & Participation
Megamenu Row 1 Slot 2
  • Conflict & International Politics
Megamenu Row 1 Slot 3
  • Environmental Justice
Megamenu Row 1 Slot 4
  • Culture & Dialogue
Main navigation
  • Foundation
Main navigation
  • Internships
Main navigation
  • Worldwide
Main navigation
  • Publications
Service Links Menu
  • Events
  • Contact
  • In the Press
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • RSS

Sexual Violence

Protest for Virginity Tests 27 Dec Solidarity stand in Egypt

Beyond the Logic of State Protection: Feminist Self-Defense in Cairo after the January 25 Revolution

Published: 3 August 2016
In the aftermath of the January 25 Revolution, self-defense tactics became popular against the fear of disorder and the increase of public sexual violence in Cairo. In this article, I examine a number of examples of self-defense invoked by public and private actors after the 2011 Revolution, and differentiate between two types of practices. The first, articulated around the right of legitimate self-defense recognized in the Egyptian penal code, aim to maintain or to restore the established order through the identification of an Other that embodies a threat to the self, property or community. In contrast to this, radical modes of self-defense endeavor to subvert the given order by disrupting the gendered logic of masculinist and state protection and promoting horizontal relations of care and solidarity. Drawing on data generated through interviews with members of the initiative OpAntiSH and the collective WenDo, this article explores the importance of strategies and communities of autonomous self-defense in Egypt in relation to legal and policy measures adopted against sexual harassment by El-Sisi’s regime since 2014.
By Susana Galán

© Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung e.V.
Schumannstraße 8
10117 Berlin
T +49 (30) 285 34-0
F +49 (30) 285 34-109
www.boell.de
info@boell.de

© Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung

Footer menu

  • Imprint
  • Privacy