Women's Equality in Saudi Arabia Probably Not Article Analysis

Document Type:Outline

Subject Area:Politics

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Equality for women will come from the women themselves” (Jones, 2018). This claim is explicitly supporting the anti-Saudi monarchy which opposes the Saudi government system since it is only in the democratic administrations where citizens have direct influences on the government reforms. In my view, this section is biased because it intentionally ignores bin Salaman’s efforts to enhance equality in this country given that protest against the driving ban date back to the 1990s. A dozen of women were detained by the previous regimes about these protests, yet bin Salaman's administration has not jailed any activist for the same issue. Besides, this article tries to persuade the audience that the Saudi’s leader is not influential in these moves since it argues that women are the main forces behind this decision.

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diplomaticourier. com/womens-equality-in-saudi-arabia-probably-not/ Critical Outline Two 1. What were the dominant social groups in your Middle East country before the spread of Islam? The pre-Islamic Arabia is used to refer to the Arabian Peninsula before the rise of the Islamic in the 630s. The Saudi Arabian pre-Islamic religion consisted of several native polytheistic beliefs, traditional Arabian Christianity, Judaism, Nestorian Christianity, and Zoroastrianism (Potts, 2017). Christianity was established by the early merchants who heard the gospel from one of the prominent Jerusalem apostles known as Peter. Before the Saudi States, Saudi Arabia was under the last Islamic caliphate known as the Ottoman Empire (Al-Rasheed, 2010). The re-establishment of the Saudi Arabian state by the Ottoman Empire resulted in the fundamental process of sociopolitical changes and religious reforms.

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