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Welcome. This website comprises mostly Hilary's sociological papers and articles about patriarchy, (gendered) harmful practices (e.g. female genital mutilation / FGM) and thoughts on science, health, environmental issues, sociological analysis, social policy and good practice.

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6684-2740

September 1, 2023

Hilary is a sociologist and Adjunct Professor at Northwestern University, Chicago (living in London).  Much of her work now focuses on the health and safety of children and vulnerable adults, gendered violence, and, particularly, female genital mutilation (about which she has researched and written two books). Other aspects of Hilary’s work concern economic influences and environmental challenges in these and wider matters.

In the 1970s Hilary was the first person in the U.K. to initiate research on women university teachers of natural science. Then as a college teacher she insisted on proper provision (eg creches) for ‘returning’ adults who wanted to study. She also researched teenage pregnancy and later provided consultancy on services such as Sure Start. Her work in the Millennium year saw her make a presentation on community engagement and regeneration to the Millennium Commissioners. Later, she collaborated with The Guardian on their #EndFGM campaign; and she continues to advise the Global Media Campaign to that end. (One particular focus for Hilary re FGM is economics.) Hilary has also taken forward her enduring concerns around environmental issues and sustainability, including as a member of the DEFRA Science Advisory Council.  These are issues not unrelated to the disadvantages faced by many women globally. More recently Hilary has developed her concept of patriarchy incarnate as it impinges on, and shapes, the lives of many ‘ordinary’ women, men and children in a wide range of health / well-being, community and economic contexts.

Further information about Hilary’s books and other publications, and her work and experiences (not least navigating decades of personal and social change in the UK!) can be found HERE.

NB Many of my papers, chapters and books have been reviewed and published by major academic publishers. Sometimes however I prefer to share my work (at no further cost to any of us, and NB at no personal financial benefit to myself) more quickly and openly, on this website – where you, the reader, are invited to comment and critique it directly, via the Comment facility at the bottom of the page.

Petition: Fund reconstruction surgery and psychosexual therapy for FGM survivors

April 30, 2024

This petition addresses the continuing lack of provision of post-female genital mutilation (FGM) health care facilities for survivors of that appalling harm who live in the United Kingdom.
The authors of the petition believe funding for surgical reconstruction and psychosexual services are essential to address the unmet need of survivors of female genital mutilation (FGM).
Please support this petition for funding clinical services in this important area.

Here is the link to access the petition https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/655651, which is open for signing by British citizens and people resident in the U.K., just until 5 August 2024.

Please if you can, support this petition.

Sign this petition

At 10,000 valid signatures the Government will respond to the petition. At 100,000 the petition will be considered for debate in Parliament.  We have only until 5 August 2024 to get the required number of signatories.

The text of the petition (which you can also read via the link above) is as follows below:

Read more…

Shahidul Alam: Journalist, Photographer And Human Rights Campaigner Endangered

April 20, 2024

Our friend and colleague, Shahidul Alam PhD, is a citizen and journalist working in Bangladesh and globally.
He studied in Britain, where three decades ago he gained his doctorate in organic chemistry before turning to photojournalism, using his camera to document the imperilled  conditions and human rights of people in various parts of the world.
Sadly the safety and freedom of Shahidul himself is now at risk.

Here is an account of what Shahidul Alam tells us happened in 2018 when he reported a safety campaign by young fellow Bangladeshis after a road traffic incident.  The text below, co-authored by Lorraine Koonce and myself, explains why that episode has somehow, even more than five years later, led to continued peril for this committed human rights campaigner.

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Please DO NOT RESCIND #EndFGM Legislation In The Gambia – An Urgent Petition (Open For Signatories)

March 31, 2024

This photograph is of Jaha Dukureh, who with other FGM survivors in 2015 so bravely persuaded legislators in The Gambia, her native country, to outlaw female genital mutilation (FGM).  Now however there is the prospect of that legislation being repealed, so that FGM can once again be practised legally.
The petition below explains why we as global citizens stand with Jaha and many others in that country and elsewhere, imploring the Gambian parliamentarians not to endorse this reversion to permit FGM.

We will send this document, supported by many more signatories – hopefully including you? – to the President and legislators of the Gambian parliament in time for it to be considered before a final decision on this desperately retrograde proposal is made in May / June 2024.

If you would like to include your name (and, if you wish, organisation and / or country) in this petition, please sign in the Comments box below this petition text; continue by clicking ‘Read on’ if you see that message, or just scroll on right down.  We will then add your details (but not your email address) along with the names of others of us who have already signed.  Thank you.

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World Water Day – And Why It Matters For #EndFGM

March 22, 2024

22 March is World Water Day, a date the UN first observed in 1993. Attention is focused on the global water crisis, highlighting the 2.2 billion people living without access to safe water. The 2024 theme, Leveraging Water for Peace, shines a light on action to tackle the devastation of global water and sanitation failures, not least for women and girls. This failure to provide safe water for consumption and hygiene is both a general crisis and one, I suggest, relating specifically to FGM (female genital mutilation).  What follows are some reasons why.

UNICEF says women and girls spend 200 million hours every day collecting water.

“200 million hours is 8.3 million days, or over 22,800 years,” said UNICEF’s global head of water, sanitation and hygiene Sanjay Wijesekera. “It would be as if a woman started with her empty bucket in the Stone Age and didn’t arrive home with water until 2016. Think how much the world has advanced in that time. Think how much women could have achieved in that time.”

This observation throws into sharp relief why we need here first to consider how and why water is such a critical issue in many parts of the ‘developing’ world / ‘global south’.  Thereafter we will also ask how the adequate availability of clean water might influence efforts to end FGM – unfortunately a matter rarely at the forefront of water policy.

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Men As Policy-Makers Must Support #EndFGM – Enable Women To Gain Respect As Adults Via Fair Social And Economic Contexts

March 14, 2024

Today I joined my friends and colleagues Dr Tobe Levin and Lorraine Koonce-Farahmand Esq to deliver a session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW68), the theme of which this year is “Accelerating the empowerment of all women and girls by addressing poverty and strengthening institutions and financing with a gender perspective”.  The title of our presentation, chaired by Ms Lois Herman of WUNRN, was ‘Innovative Approaches to Ending FGM: Academia, Policy and Advocacy’. My topic was Can practical ‘developments’ in socio-economic contexts help end FGM?

My thoughts on this question focused around the criticality of supportive measures by men, comprising the majority of politicians, leaders and policy-makers, in places where female genital mutilation (FGM) still occurs.  It is very largely still men who decide how to shape laws, communities and infrastructure; but few consider actively how their decisions can enhance or damage moves to end this cruel and harmful traditional practice.

Nonetheless, there are many more men than those brave few openly declaring their opposition to FGM (examples here), who would like to see it end. I suggest in this post for their consideration some ideas about how that objective might by wider socio-economic developments be pursued.

Efforts to ensure women everywhere are respected as responsible adults, regardless of their FGM ‘status’, might be a powerful force towards eradication.  This would require determined focus on enabling women to live their lives autonomously, free to be economically independent, and without the ‘need’ for reliance on husbands and other men.

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Eradicating Female Genital Mutilation: Looking At Practical And Low-Tech Ways Forward

March 8, 2024

This post, in recognition of  International Women’s Day (8 March), is a follow-up to my piece 0n Eradicating Female Genital Mutilation: Identifying The Tensions And Challenges of 6 February 2024, which was International Zero Tolerance for FGM Day.  In the first post I considered some wider socio-economic contexts in which violence against women and girls (VAWG), especially FGM, continue, and some issues which can occur in terms of potentially conflicting interpretations and / or hypocrisies around such difficult and complex situations.

In this second post, referencing the always critical issue of sustainability, I consider some of the possibilities, already potential or in use, for the general adoption of practical measures, low technologies and public information in the eradication of FGM and other VAWG.  In doing so I have drawn on findings from the COP26* conference on global environmental challenges such as energy (carbon), population and food, and on examples of accessible technologies and items such as mobile phones and bicycles. None of these ideas and suggestions is mine alone, but perhaps they help focus on the wider aspects of ending FGM, as well as the immediate medical, legal and educational mechanisms.  Both are I believe essential for effective progress to be made.

This is the UN statement of IWD 2024.  Below are some suggestions about how it interfaces specifically with efforts to #EndFGM.

In a world facing multiple crises that are putting immense pressure on communities, achieving gender equality is more vital than ever. Ensuring women’s and girls’ rights across all aspects of life is the only way to secure prosperous and just economies, and a healthy planet for future generations.

One of the key challenges in achieving gender equality by 2030 is an alarming lack of financing with a staggering USD 360 billion annual deficit in spending on gender-equality measures.

The time for change is now! Join us on 8 March 2024 for International Women’s Day as we rally behind the call to “Invest in women: Accelerate progress”.

[*COP26 was the 2021 meeting, in Glasgow in November 2021, of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). ‘COP’ is an abbreviation of ‘Conference of the Parties’, of which that event was the 26th].

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Eradicating Female Genital Mutilation: Identifying Tensions And Challenges

February 6, 2024

Today is International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation (FGM), which perhaps offers an opportunity to look at progress made and some of the challenges ahead in ending FGM.

I am an academic sociologist.  I subtitled my Eradicating Female Genital Mutilation book, published in 2015, ‘A UK Perspective‘ because I wanted to show respect to those, unlike me, working in and reporting directly from the field, often in countries in Africa or the Middle East.

What I researched and wrote about covered also however many parts of the globe beyond the U.K. – and the book was amongst the very first expressly to consider FGM from wider socio-economic and epidemiological perspectives.  My thoughts today, presented here in summary, are therefore on progress made since 2015, and on issues which we must still address.

Particularly, I have considered here, looking back on this topic, ways in which these issues connect with another major theme which preoccupies me – the adoption of practical wider socio-economic measures and low-level technologies which, as well as having intrinsic value, may help to move forward  the resolution of matters such as FGM.  I will examine this second theme more closely in a subsequent post. Read more…

And The Most Complex Unaided Human Neurophysiological Collaboration Ever Is… An Orchestra?

January 26, 2024

This is a little diversion from my usual themes, but it’s a happy thought, so here goes: I suspect that the most complex stand-alone neurophysiological ‘exercise’ in the whole of human history is… a symphony orchestra.  And since this week marks the annual conference of the Association of British Orchestras, now seems a good time to mention this.
The picture of the left is just one small example of the score for a single instrument (in this case, first violins) in a work for a large-scale orchestra.

As the score suggests, sometimes more than one note must be played at once, and they must often be played very rapidly, and always exactly together and extremely accurately.  And everything must carry on precisely like that for, say, forty minutes or even an hour, if a major symphony or concerto (with soloist) is on offer in the concert.

But of course orchestras have many more instruments than ‘just’ violins…. Read more…

The Routledge International Handbook of Harmful Cultural Practices

November 27, 2023

Dr Tobe Levin von Gleichen writes: “Addressed to teachers at all levels, activists, policy-makers, and readers who care about girls’ and women’s wellbeing, this wide-ranging cornucopia of scientific analyses and literary essays promotes ending FGM. Its power derives from scholarship clearly presented to lay readers and contrasting viewpoints from all continents except Antarctica. Its intersectional lens illuminates FGM among allied abuses: early and forced marriage; surgical responses to intersex infants; the virginity complex in Western countries and more.

“Dr. Tobe Levin von Gleichen and Dr. U.H. Ruhina Jesmin edit UnCUT/VOICES publications, and the fine work of a number of contributors, including Hilary Burrage, has also appeared under the UnCUT/VOICES colophon. We are proud of our association with Routledge in offering you this resource.”

The book can be obtained here.  I am delighted to be a contributor to this important publication, as the author of Chapter 12, on FGM Studies: Economics, Public Health, and Societal Wellbeing. Further details of the book follow below. Read more…

A National Traffic Lights System To Report NHS And Other Concerns Would Ensure Accountability

August 27, 2023

UK news a few days ago of the paediatric nurse Lucy Letby ‘Guilty’ verdicts – confirming that she did indeed murder several tiny babies (and tried to kill even more) – has left most of us numb, almost unable to comprehend what happened.  But behind these verdicts lie questions about why it took so long to stop the horror; and what can be done to prevent such awful crimes in the future?  One possible way forward would be a national ‘traffic lights’ system to record all child or vulnerable adult abuse concerns and the official responses to them.

Read more…

Blade of Tradition in the Name of Religion: A Phenomenological Investigation into Male Circumcision in Iran (Ahmady, 2023)

August 20, 2023

There has long been a debate about whether ‘male circumcision’ – what some of us call ‘male genital mutilation’ (MGM) – can be seen in the same light as female genital mutilation (FGM). My own view is that there are both similarities and, to an extent, differences, but each is done on children who cannot consent, and both can in fact be deeply incapacitating or even lethal (in parts of Africa, many boys die from ritual circumcision every year).  Yet still, in some global locations very little is known about the realities of MGM.  It is good therefore to report the newly published study by my colleague Kameel Ahmady of male circumcision in Iran. Kameel asked me to write a Foreword to his book.  This follows below.

Foreword by Hilary Burrage to Blade of Tradition in the Name of Religion (Ahmady, 2023)  Read more…

Women’s Fury At Gendered Violence Is Justified; How Can We Help To Stop The Harm?

August 7, 2023

It was great recently to meet up with Prof. Lori Ann Post, whilst she was on a visit to London. Dr. Post  is Director of the Buehler Center at the Northwestern University Feinstein School of Medicine in Chicago, where she some while ago appointed me an Adjunct Professor; so we had a lot to catch up on and discuss. Lori is well able to express her own views, but one issue which we explored a little is why there is often something of a chasm between the activists campaigning on the ground against, eg, FGM, and those who research it with the same aim.  I will try to consider that challenge briefly in this post.

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Belgravia In Bloom ’23

May 29, 2023

Have you heard of Belgravia in Bloom? It’s a more relaxed and open-to-all mini version of the globally renown nearby (and concurrent) Chelsea Flower Show. Now in its eight year, this festival of flowers is definitely… blossoming.

I’ve just joined POST, a new(ish) blogging site, and I thought I’d start with something positive, a few nice photos and a bit of London history.  Maybe you’d like to take a look? Read more…

Dr Phoebe Abe-Okwonga: FGM Activist And Physician

May 19, 2023

Dr Phoebe Abe-Okwonga MB ChB, MSc(CTM ), FRSA is a General Practitioner (GP) and Community Health physician who has practised for many years at the Yiewsley Health Centre in West Drayton, Greater London, England – where she holds an hour-long free and open clinic every Monday and Friday lunchtime, even in lockdown, for any woman who has undergone female genital mutilation (FGM).

Phoebe, a widowed mother of five originally from Uganda, completed her medical studies decades ago in the UK and has been concerned about FGM for many years. There are, she says, some 200 million women and girls now alive who have endured FGM, and around 130 to 140 thousand of them live in the UK.

Read more…

Is The Idea Of Patriarchy In Nations Like The UK Outdated?

April 27, 2023

23.07.27 Fabian logo IMG_7932 (002)‘The Patriarchy’ has been a mainstay of feminist critiques of societies for decades; and even before that, over the centuries, the idea that men have huge advantages over women was well understood and often discussed.  But is it still the case in modern contemporary societies that, simply because they are men, some human beings have advantage over others, who happen to be female?
This was the question I addressed today in a talk for our local Fabian Society.  Does patriarchy remain so embedded that we just don’t see it?

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The Hurt Of Female Genital Mutilation Doesn’t Go Away Over The Years

March 26, 2023

23.02.28 Phoebe AbeA conversation about FGM today with my friend and colleague Dr Phoebe Abe-Okwonga has raised some quite important questions about ‘Where do we go from here?’. Phoebe has been working in her pro bono London clinic with FGM victims / ‘survivors’ for many years, so she has a massively valuable perspective on what’s happening.  Unfortunately, the answer is: We’re not doing enough.   People and things to be recorded change over the years, and perhaps the UK approach to FGM hasn’t always kept up?

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Twenty Years Of Zero Tolerance Day To #EndFGM: But No End To Gender Debates And Genital ‘Treatments’

February 6, 2023

February 6 is International Day of Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation.  Begun twenty years ago today (2023), the Zero Tolerance initiative has seen considerable success. But much remains to be done.  One major issue is that other forms of elective genital surgery / ‘cutting’ continue unimpeded: male circumcision, genital cosmetic surgery and transgender surgeries are widely accepted, even in some cases for minors unavoidably unable to give informed consent. This is a major problem for #EndFGM.

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The Route To End FGM: Moving From ‘Multi-Agency’ Via Multi-Disciplinary To Public Health And Economics

October 1, 2022

Efforts to end female genital mutilation (FGM) have for decades been an important element in promoting the health of women and girls in many parts of the world; but still this gendered harmful practice continues.

Abstract: In this piece, written for the journal EC Gynaecology and primarily as a ‘conversation’ with obstetric and gynaecological clinicians whether in the ‘developed’ or the ‘developing’ world, I seek to

• Create connections between the clinical treatment/care of women and girls with female genital (‘sexual’) mutilation (FGM) and various of the environments in which the practice continues;
• Establish that two themes – economics and patriarchy – are critical to a full understanding of this harmful practice; and
• Explore ways in which colleague support across disciplinary boundaries, along with a willingness to try new approaches to the problem, may help to enable a Public Health framework leading to the eradication of FGM.

I also note in the above contexts some of the personal discomforts and very different circumstances which various professionals, amongst them clinicians, may experience as they move towards a wider perspective on FGM; and I explore, in anticipation I hope of further discussion, possible ways forward to resolve these valid potential challenges or problems.

A web-linked version of my paper, published on 29 September 2022, follows below:

Read more…

Dawoodi Bohra Head Priest Must Forbid #FGM As He Visits Britain

August 1, 2022

The Dawoodi Bohras are a religious sect of the Ismali branch of Shia Islam. Whilst originating in India, Pakistan, SE Asia and nearby Africa, many of the million or more adherents, women and men alike, are well educated, professional people now living in Europe, North America and Australia,   For most of them the idea of female genital mutilation (FGM)* in any form is abhorrent, even though some followers of the Islamic faith still insist on it.

And so, between the competing perspectives of ‘modern’ and ‘traditional’ Bohras lies a serious conflict: the modernists, especially in places like the USA and Britain, demand that FGM be forbidden; but the traditionalists, headed up by their Syedna (‘leader’) Mufaddal Saifuddin, are not as yet convinced.

Bohras in Britain have therefore called for a demonstration, demanding that the Syedna declare FGM is forbidden, during his visit to London in August 2022:

🗓 Friday 5 August 2022
📍 Mohammedi Complex, Rowdell Road, Northolt, London, UB5 6AG
⏰ 12.30pm- 3.30pm

Anyone nervous about being identified is invited to bring, or ask on arrival for, a mask.

Below is the Open Letter, supported and published by various organisations and individuals, which explains the issues around FGM which Dawoodi Bohras in the UK face:

Read more…