Image for Muslim women's quest for justice: gender, law and activism in India

Muslim women's quest for justice: gender, law and activism in India

Part of the Cambridge studies in law and society series
See all formats and editions

This book is an urban ethnographic study of several Muslim women's organisations in northern India.

These organisations work to carve out spaces that allow for the articulation of alternative experiences and conceptions of religion and justice that challenge Islamic orthodoxy as well as the monopoly of the Indian state in the domain of family law.

While most analyses on reform efforts within Muslim family law in India have focused on women's protection within the state legal system, this book offers the rare opportunity to understand how organised groups of Muslim women's rights activists contest marginalising forces present in the family and criminal courts, Shariat courts, local mosques, workplace, legislature and legal documents.

It pushes against troubling assumptions that Islam is incompatible with ideas of women's rights and that the State is the only dispenser of justice, and offers new directions for studies on the dispersed nature of women's identities in Islamic family law.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108226086 / 9781108226080
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
09/05/2018
England
English
251 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Reprint. Previously issued in print: 2017 Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.