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Adjudication in Religious Family Laws
Cultural Accommodation, Legal Pluralism, and Gender Equality in India
Argues that the shared adjudication model regarding the regulation of marriage can potentially balance cultural rights and gender equality.
Gopika Solanki (Author)
9781107610590, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 14 February 2013
438 pages, 4 b/w illus. 4 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.3 cm, 0.58 kg
This book argues that the shared adjudication model in which the state splits its adjudicative authority with religious groups and other societal sources in the regulation of marriage can potentially balance cultural rights and gender equality. In this model the civic and religious sources of legal authority construct, transmit and communicate heterogeneous notions of the conjugal family, gender relations and religious membership within the interstices of state and society. In so doing, they fracture the homogenized religious identities grounded in hierarchical gender relations within the conjugal family. The shared adjudication model facilitates diversity as it allows the construction of hybrid religious identities, creates fissures in ossified group boundaries and provides institutional spaces for ongoing intersocietal dialogue. This pluralized legal sphere, governed by ideologically diverse legal actors, can thus increase gender equality and individual and collective legal mobilization by women effects institutional change.
1. Introduction
2. The shared adjudication model: theoretical framework and arguments
3. State law and the adjudication process: marriage, divorce, and the conjugal family in Hindu and Muslim personal law
4. Making and unmaking the conjugal family: the administration of Hindu law in society
5. Juristic diversity, contestations over 'Islamic law' and women's rights: regulation of matrimonial matters in Muslim personal law
6. Conclusion.
Subject Areas: Family law [LNM], Legal system: general [LNA], Politics & government [JP], Religion: general [HRA]