Gallagher, Margaret2019-09-252019-09-252011-10-272010-010143-5558http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/181460"These women’s sense of achievement at being seen as ‘real’ human beings – a state that apparently they had not experienced previously – shows that there is a deep hole in any discussion of human rights that does not explicitly – and I stress, explicitly – acknowledge and elucidate the specific position of women within the human community. Analysis that claims to include both women and men in a general rights framework hides the deeply gendered division of power and rights within communities everywhere. The result is a disaster for women’s human rights."engWith permission of the license/copyright holderhuman rightswomen's communication rightsviolencegender-based censorshipgender ethicsCultural ethicsMedia/communication/information ethicsCultural/intercultural ethicsIntercultural and contextual theologiesGender and theologyWomen’s human and communication rightsArticle