<div> 1. Introduction.- Section 1 Gender identities and sexualities.- 2. Loving Daughters, Devoted Sons and Kissing Protestors Online: Navigating Intimacy and Multiple Aspects of the Self among Young Facebook Users in Egypt.- 3. Making Visible the Unseen Queer: Gay Dating Apps and Ideologies of Truthmaking in an Outing Campaign in Morocco.- 4. Queer Resistance and Activism in Upon the Shadow.- 5. Saudi Women in the Mohammed bin Salman Era: Examining the Paradigm Shift.- Section 2: Gender and Activism.- 6. Mothering the protest: Gender performativity as a communication mechanism in the Iraqi protest movement.- 7. Iraq’s October Revolution: Between Structures of Patriarchy and Emotion.- 8. Blogging in the pre-war Syria. Female Voices from within and Authoritarian regime and patriarchal society.- 9. Syrian women in the digital sphere.- 10. Following in Gezi’s steps: Women’s activism after the Gezi protests.- 11. Egypt’s #Metoo in the Shadow of Revolution: Digital Activism and the Demobilization of the Sexual Harassment Movement.- Section 3: The Gender of Politics.- 12. Women and Politics in the Islamic Republic of Iran: The Role of Women’s Magazines.- 13. Oman’s women and in the media navigating political and social powers: Females’ Election campaigns versus traditional media.- 14. The Intersection of Politics, Gender, and Media: Female Politicians in Popular Israeli Women’s Magazines.- 15. Seizing the Opportunity: Political Participation of Libyan Women and their Partaking in Communication Platforms.-16. Facebook's Role in Empowering Egyptian Women During COVID-19: Case of the 2020 Parliamentary Elections.- Section 4: Gender-Based Violence.- 17. Digital Intimacy and Violence in Contemporary Libya.- 18. Palestinian women’s digital activism against gender-based violence: Navigating transnational and social media spaces.- 19. Uncovering Narratives; the effects of Algerian media and legal system on domestic violence survivors.- 20. Egyptian Women’s Cyberactivism: The ongoing battle against sexual harassment & gender-based violence.- 21. “Don’t touch me”: Sexual harassments, digital threats, and social resistance toward Kuwaiti female journalists.- 22. Gender in Yemeni media: Hostility and marginalization in a fractured media.- Section 5: The Gender of Expressive Cultures.- 23. Redefining the Archive: Birdsong, Tied Circles, and Woman-Space in Dunya Mikhail’s In Her Feminine Sign.- 24. Feminism ruptured, or feminism repaired? Music, feminisms, and gender politics in Palestinian subcultures.- 25. Moroccan Hip Hop Queens: A (Her)Story of Rap Music in Morocco.- 26. Women artists and contemporary art in the Maghreb: insights from the works of Aicha Filali, Sana Tamzini, and Khadija Tnana.- 27. Laughable resistance? The role of humor in Middle Eastern women’s social media empowerment.- 28. Egyptian Women’s Graffiti and the Construction of Future Imaginaries.- Section 6: Gender and Entrepreneurship.- 29. ICTs Impact on Female Entrepreneurs in Lebanon and UAE.- 30. Gender and ICT entrepreneurship in Jordan and Kuwait.- 31. Disruptive Social Entrepreneurship from Bahrain: The Case of Esra’a Al Shafei.</div><div> </div>