TY - BOOK ID - 86133287 TI - Jurisdictional exceptionalisms : Islamic law, international law, and parental child abduction AU - Emon, Anver M. AU - Khaliq, Urfan PY - 2021 SN - 1108938698 1108945740 1108944981 1108837255 PB - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, DB - UniCat KW - Conflict of laws KW - Parental kidnapping KW - Custody of children (Islamic law) KW - Criminal law KW - Parent and child (Law) KW - Choice of law KW - Intermunicipal law KW - International law, Private KW - International private law KW - Private international law KW - Law KW - Legal polycentricity KW - Ḥaḍānah (Islamic law) KW - Islamic law KW - Kidnapping, Parental KW - Kidnapping KW - Custody of children KW - Custody of children. KW - Law and legislation KW - Law and legislation. KW - Civil law KW - Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction KW - Convention sur les aspects civils de l'enlèvement international d'enfants KW - Guo ji you guai er tong min shi fang mian de gong yue KW - Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction KW - Konvention om de civila aspekterna på internationella bortföranden av barn KW - Uluslararası Çocuk Kaçırmanın Hukuki Veçhelerine Dair Sözleşme KW - Hague Abduction Convention UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:86133287 AB - Jurisdictional Exceptionalisms examines the legal issues associated with a parent's forced removal of their children to reside in another country following relationship dissolution or divorce. Through an analysis of Public and Private International Laws, and Islamic law - historical and as implemented in contemporary Muslim Family Law States - the authors uncover distinct legal lexicons that centre children's interests in premodern Islamic legal doctrines, modern State practice, and multilateral conventions on children. While legal advocates and policy makers pursue global solutions to parental child abduction, this volume identifies fundamental obstacles, including the absence of shared understandings of jurisdiction. By examining the relevant law and practice, the study exposes the polarised politics embedded in the technical legal rules on jurisdiction. Presenting a new, innovative method in comparative legal history, the book examines the beliefs, values, histories, doctrines, institutions and practices of legal systems presumed to be in conflict with one another. ER -