Igniting Social Change or: How I learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Blog

    I just returned (ok, it was Thursday and I finally posted this on the blog now) from Demos, where they held an excellent discussion of social networking and social change. I would have blogged live but I much prefer to check my spelling and grammar on Microsoft Word and balancing a laptop actually on my lap, is well, awkward. So instead, I am semi-live blogging; coming to you slightly after the fact - but with hopefully limited grammatical errors and chock full o' analysis. Call it a compromise. Besides, I didn't have the network key to log on to the Demos network.

    So grab yourself a latté and cancel all prior appointments, because we have a lot to discuss. Read on, after the break.

Kuwait Elects No Women to New Parliament

Linda Linda R | July 2, 2006 - 2:30 am

Tags: election, Kuwait, women

No Women Elected to New Parliament in Kuwait

In spite of political gains for women in 2005, Kuwaiti voters failed to elect any women to parliament in yesterday's election, though 27 of 250 candidates were women. Kuwaiti women voted in parliamentary elections yesterday for the first time after receiving the right to vote and run for office in May of 2005.

The parliamentary election, which was originally scheduled for 2007, was held yesterday after the emir, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmed al-Sabah, dissolved the 50-member parliament in May. Political reformists, which included Islamic fundamentalists and secular activists, won thirty-six of the fifty seats, reports the Associated Press.

Though women were only 35 percent of yesterday's overall turnout, women comprise 57 percent of eligible voters and have the power to exert a strong political force, according to Reuters. Adnan al-Shatti, male parliamentary candidate and a child psychologist, believes that women's participation will change the way parliament thinks about women's issues. "All the candidates were forced to consider women's issues in their campaigns because the women now have a lot of political weight," Shatti said in an interview with the Washington Post.