Religious Law in the Service of Human Rights?

IF 0.3 N/A RELIGION
Wiebke Greeff
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

During the 1990s, a period representing the peak of often novel interpretations in human rights litigation by the judges of the Egyptian Supreme Constitutional Court, Egypt’s human rights performance was better than in other Islamic states sharing a commitment to the supremacy of Shari’a law. This article argues that there is a gap between the dogmatic assertion of the communal good life defined in traditional Islamic terms and the reality of governance usually at odds with these stipulations. The peculiar practice of the Egyptian Supreme Constitutional Court in the 1990s highlighted two crucial, related questions: first, was it in principle possible to narrow that gap and align governmental action to rules derived from scripture? Second, does the highly fragmented and inconsistent character of classical Islamic law offer advantages in its adaptation to modernity? This article claims that the relative progress towards compliance with international human rights standards was due to progressive and strategically litigating judges, who used Islamic law opportunistically rather than dogmatically.
宗教法为人权服务?
20世纪90年代是埃及最高宪法法院法官在人权诉讼中经常作出新颖解释的高峰期,在此期间,埃及的人权表现比其他信奉伊斯兰教法至上的伊斯兰国家要好。本文认为,在传统伊斯兰教义中定义的共同美好生活的教条主张与通常与这些规定不一致的治理现实之间存在着差距。埃及最高宪法法院在20世纪90年代的特殊做法突出了两个关键的相关问题:首先,原则上是否有可能缩小这一差距,并使政府行动与源自经文的规则保持一致?第二,古典伊斯兰法律高度碎片化和不一致的特点是否为其适应现代性提供了优势?这篇文章声称,在遵守国际人权标准方面取得的相对进展是由于进步和战略性诉讼的法官,他们机会主义地而不是教条地使用伊斯兰法律。
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CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
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