The public debate on Shariʿa councils in Britain has been heavily influenced by the assumption that the councils exist as religious authorities and that those who use them exercise their right to religious freedom. In Shariʿa Councils and Muslim Women in Britain Tanya Walker draws on extensive fieldwork from over 100 cases to argue for a radically different understanding of the setting and dynamics of the Shariʿa councils. The analysis highlights the pragmatic manoeuvrings of Muslim women, in pursuit of defined objectives, within limited space – holding in tension both the constraints of particular frameworks of power, and the realities of women’s agency. Despite this needed nuance in a polarised debate however, important questions about the rights of Muslim women remain.
Another Economy is Possible: Culture and Economy ... -- ©2017
Manuel Castells
List Price : US$ 27.00Anthropological Research in India Retrospect and ... -- ©2023
Abhradip Banerjee
List Price : £ 85.00Black Gods of the Asphalt Religion, Hip-Hop, and ... -- ©2016
Onaje X. Woodbine
List Price : US$ 30.00The Paradox of Vulnerability States, Nationalism, ... -- ©2017
John L. Campbell
List Price : US$ 30.00Transnational Religious Organization and Practice -- ©2018
Stanley J. Valayil C. John
List Price : € 49.00What Slaveholders Think How Contemporary ... -- ©2017
Austin Choi Fitzpatrick
List Price : US$ 35.00
B-116, Sector 67,
Gautam Budh Nagar
Noida - 201301 Uttar Pradesh,
India
Mobile: +91-9810773221 / 23
Landline: +91-120-2484152
orders@adityabooks.in
Powered by Cyberspace Networking Systems Pvt. Ltd