Dear friend
One Law for All, in conjunction with Southall Black Sisters and Fitnah, is conducting a survey as part of a research project investigating the nature and impact of segregation, specifically gender segregation, at universities in the United Kingdom.
If you have experienced gender segregation at a university, please take a few moments to respond to the questionnaire online by 31 March 2014. This research project is conducted in full compliance with the Ethics Guidelines of the Social Research Association. Your data will be treated as confidential and your participation will remain anonymous.
For more information about this research or to provide more in depth information, please contact: gendersegregationsurvey@gmail.com.
Thank you for your participation.
Warmest wishes
Maryam Namazie
Spokesperson
NOTES:
1. Please don’t forget to book early for the international Conference on the Religious-Right, Secularism and Civil Rights in London during 11-12 October 2014 so you can get the Early Bird Special Rates. The conference has a fantastic line-up of well known secularists from across the world. It is a not-to-be-missed event. We do hope to see you there!
2. I am hoping to start a new TV programme broadcast in Iran and the Middle East via Satellite called Bread and Roses. If you want to support the taboo-breaking, freethinking programme which will deal with a lot of the issues raised by One Law for All, please donate here. No amount is too little and every bit will help get equipment to tape the much-needed programmes.
No survey on gender segregation at secular schools in the UK then? I went to a gender-segregated school for 7 years. All attendees complied. Any dissent was crushed. Why no survey? Because islam wasn’t the culprit?
You can’t compare apples with cigarettes and be taken seriously. Your problem is that you are only concerned with saving and defending Islam and not about equality between sexes, which is what this fight is about and why you are opposed to it.
Sorry – what are the apples and what are the cigarettes? I don’t understand your criticism. Surely boys and girls should both have access to the same educational facilities.
…in your own time