穆斯林家庭法改革:了解穆斯林占多数和穆斯林占少数司法管辖区之间的差异

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Y. Sezgin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

35个穆斯林占多数的国家和18个穆斯林占少数的国家正式将穆斯林家庭法纳入其法律体系。这两组政府都进行了立法改革,以改善妇女/儿童在家庭暴力制度下的地位,并加强其家庭暴力制度内的法治。现有的奖学金并没有说明穆斯林占多数的国家和穆斯林占少数的国家的穆斯林是否更改革或人权/妇女权利更友好。这篇探索性的文章采用了一种创新的方法论工具——穆斯林家庭法指数,调查了1946年至2016年穆斯林家庭法改革的跨国和历史趋势。它表明,尽管穆斯林少数民族国家似乎比穆斯林少数民族国家有更多的“改革”的刑法制度,但更仔细的分析表明,他们优先考虑的是不同类型的立法改革。前者支持退出权,而后者则优先考虑实质性改革。干预的类型和程度与殖民遗产、国家-宗教关系、国际规范传播、妇女行动主义和民族-宗教多样性/宽容密切相关。这些研究结果对研究多元文化理论、人权/妇女权利以及在多语言应用领域的民主化具有启示意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Muslim Family Law Reform: Understanding the Difference between Muslim-Majority and Muslim-Minority Jurisdictions
35 Muslim-majority and 18 Muslim-minority countries formally integrate Muslim Family Laws (mfl s) into their legal systems. Both groups of governments have undertaken legislative reforms to improve the status of women/children under mfl s and strengthen the rule of law within their mfl systems. The existing scholarship does not address whether mfl s are more reformed or human/women’s rights friendlier in Muslim-majority or Muslim-minority countries. Employing an innovative methodological tool, the Muslim Family Law Index, this exploratory article surveys cross-national and historical trends in mfl reform (1946–2016). It shows that although Muslim-minority countries appear to have more “reformed” mfl systems than their Muslim counterparts, a closer analysis reveals that they have prioritized different types of legislative reform. The former favored exit rights, while the latter prioritized substantive reforms. The type and extent of interventions were strongly associated with colonial heritage, state-religion relations, international norm diffusion, women’s activism, and ethnoreligious diversity/tolerance. These findings have implications for studying multicultural theory, human/women’s rights, and democratization in the mfl-applying world.
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来源期刊
Journal of Law, Religion and State
Journal of Law, Religion and State Arts and Humanities-Religious Studies
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
5
期刊介绍: The Journal of Law Religion and State provides an international forum for the study of the interactions between law and religion and between religion and state. It seeks to explore these interactions from legal and constitutional as well as from internal religious perspectives. The JLRS is a peer-reviewed journal that is committed to a broad and open discussion on a cross-cultural basis. Submission of articles in the following areas: religion and state; legal and political aspects of all religious traditions; comparative research of different religious legal systems and their interrelations are welcomed as are contributions from multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives.
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