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Human rights under state-enforced religious family laws in Israel, Egypt, and India
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ISBN: 1139893327 1107425417 1107423228 1107417481 1107420105 1107421411 1139649612 9781107417489 9781139649612 9781107420106 9781107421417 9781107041400 1107041406 9781107636491 1107636493 9781107636491 9781139893329 9781107425415 9781107423220 Year: 2013 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

About one-third of the world's population currently lives under pluri-legal systems where governments hold individuals subject to the purview of ethno-religious rather than national norms in respect to family law. How does the state-enforcement of these religious family laws impact fundamental rights and liberties? What resistance strategies do people employ in order to overcome the disabilities and limitations these religious laws impose upon their rights? Based on archival research, court observations and interviews with individuals from three countries, Yüksel Sezgin shows that governments have often intervened in order to impress a particular image of subjectivity upon a society, while people have constantly challenged the interpretive monopoly of courts and state-sanctioned religious institutions, re-negotiated their rights and duties under the law, and changed the system from within. He also identifies key lessons and best practices for the integration of universal human rights principles into religious legal systems.

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