The Supreme Court of India declared triple talaq, a type of Islamic divorce, as unconstitutional in 2017. Following that, in 2019, the Parliament enacted the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act, 2019, which criminalised the pronouncement of triple talaq. Triple talaq as a form of divorce continues to hold legitimacy under the uncodified religious law that Muslims in India abide by in their everyday life. What, then, is the impact of the criminalisation of this practice at the level of the community? What does intervention by the criminal justice system mean for justice in inter-personal disputes that are primarily of civil nature? The paper explores how disputes involving the question of triple talaq unfold in police station...
In August, 2017, the Indian Supreme Court ruled on a landmark case involving one Shayara Bano and fo...
In this introduction, we situate the special section, ‘Containing Religious Offence beyond the Court...
In this introduction, we situate the special section, ‘Containing Religious Offence beyond the Court...
Today, the issues of women rights in Muslim personal Law is highly controversial. Specially, Muslim ...
The recent proposed Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Bill 2017 has raised the new iss...
This article talks about one of the biggest socio-legal issues that India faced till 27 august 2017t...
This paper debates the implications of matrimonial offenses on the family institution. The offence o...
The fight of Muslim women in India is a crusade of rights. They have often remained a puppet in the ...
The recent case of Shayara Bano v Union of India heard before the Supreme Court of India provide hel...
The Supreme Court of India has declared the Muslim practice of men divorcing their wife by repeating...
This article explores Talāq, which refers to the right of men in Islam to divorce their wives, with ...
In this paper, we show how this plural legal landscape is negotiated by litigants, especially women,...
English courts consider the validity of a talaq obtained abroad on the basis of the lex matrimonii, ...
Talaq, in general, refers to the dissolution of a valid marriage through the pronouncement of divorc...
India’s 65 million Muslim women, often called a minority within a minority their double handicap of ...
In August, 2017, the Indian Supreme Court ruled on a landmark case involving one Shayara Bano and fo...
In this introduction, we situate the special section, ‘Containing Religious Offence beyond the Court...
In this introduction, we situate the special section, ‘Containing Religious Offence beyond the Court...
Today, the issues of women rights in Muslim personal Law is highly controversial. Specially, Muslim ...
The recent proposed Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Bill 2017 has raised the new iss...
This article talks about one of the biggest socio-legal issues that India faced till 27 august 2017t...
This paper debates the implications of matrimonial offenses on the family institution. The offence o...
The fight of Muslim women in India is a crusade of rights. They have often remained a puppet in the ...
The recent case of Shayara Bano v Union of India heard before the Supreme Court of India provide hel...
The Supreme Court of India has declared the Muslim practice of men divorcing their wife by repeating...
This article explores Talāq, which refers to the right of men in Islam to divorce their wives, with ...
In this paper, we show how this plural legal landscape is negotiated by litigants, especially women,...
English courts consider the validity of a talaq obtained abroad on the basis of the lex matrimonii, ...
Talaq, in general, refers to the dissolution of a valid marriage through the pronouncement of divorc...
India’s 65 million Muslim women, often called a minority within a minority their double handicap of ...
In August, 2017, the Indian Supreme Court ruled on a landmark case involving one Shayara Bano and fo...
In this introduction, we situate the special section, ‘Containing Religious Offence beyond the Court...
In this introduction, we situate the special section, ‘Containing Religious Offence beyond the Court...