International audienceIn this article, I examine the appearance of Muslim women before the judge during the Abbasid period (132-334/750-945), both in theory and practice. The cases involving women found in law books suggest that they came freely to the court, especially for familial or marital purposes, and that the judges employed some women as court auxiliaries. However, a comparison of judicial manuals and the biographical literature shows that a woman's appearance before the judge could create a social disturbance and that not all women were allowed to appear in court. I argue that the social distinction between those who could leave their houses--and thus come before the judge--and those who could not correlated with the social hierarc...
Given the current dearth of women exercising Islamic authority, it may be assumed that for most of I...
Women Judges in the Muslim World: A Comparative Study of Discourse and Practice fills a gap in acade...
This thesis brings a corrective to the secondary literature that addresses women's participation in ...
International audienceIn this article, I examine the appearance of Muslim women before the judge dur...
This Article focuses on qadis and courts before modern legal reforms with particular emphasis on the...
The Abbasid state (132-656 AH) has a special importance in human history because it is one of the la...
This Article focuses on issues of Islamic discrimination against women and asks how centuries of leg...
Before the advent of Islam, the position of women varied widely across different regions and culture...
This encyclopedia entry is about the relationships between judges and rulers in Medieval Islam. In e...
Pre-modern Islamic law famously discriminated against female testimony, in some cases excluding it e...
The subject of the position of women has developed considerably over the last few years, expanding o...
In a history written by men, women are typically assigned minimal agency, hardly indicative of their...
A modern-day visitor to Jamic Amr ibn al-cAs mosque in Cairo during the month of Ramadan can not mis...
The appointment of women as judges in Muslim countries remains a challenging and debatable issue du...
This article presents a study of the women of the Abbasid household in 8th-/14th- and 9th-/15th-cent...
Given the current dearth of women exercising Islamic authority, it may be assumed that for most of I...
Women Judges in the Muslim World: A Comparative Study of Discourse and Practice fills a gap in acade...
This thesis brings a corrective to the secondary literature that addresses women's participation in ...
International audienceIn this article, I examine the appearance of Muslim women before the judge dur...
This Article focuses on qadis and courts before modern legal reforms with particular emphasis on the...
The Abbasid state (132-656 AH) has a special importance in human history because it is one of the la...
This Article focuses on issues of Islamic discrimination against women and asks how centuries of leg...
Before the advent of Islam, the position of women varied widely across different regions and culture...
This encyclopedia entry is about the relationships between judges and rulers in Medieval Islam. In e...
Pre-modern Islamic law famously discriminated against female testimony, in some cases excluding it e...
The subject of the position of women has developed considerably over the last few years, expanding o...
In a history written by men, women are typically assigned minimal agency, hardly indicative of their...
A modern-day visitor to Jamic Amr ibn al-cAs mosque in Cairo during the month of Ramadan can not mis...
The appointment of women as judges in Muslim countries remains a challenging and debatable issue du...
This article presents a study of the women of the Abbasid household in 8th-/14th- and 9th-/15th-cent...
Given the current dearth of women exercising Islamic authority, it may be assumed that for most of I...
Women Judges in the Muslim World: A Comparative Study of Discourse and Practice fills a gap in acade...
This thesis brings a corrective to the secondary literature that addresses women's participation in ...