Around the Web

Here are some important law-and-religion news stories from around the web:

  • Catholic leaders have criticized Trump’s immigration policies, arguing they infringe upon the religious liberties of migrants. 
  • At an event at the Museum of the Bible in Washington, Trump announced that the Department of Education will issue new guidelines safeguarding students’ right to pray in public schools.  
  • The US 9th Circuit upheld California’s requirement that home-based charter school programs use only secular educational materials.   
  • The Ukranian government has announced that it may ban an Orthodox Church that has refused to sever ties with Moscow amid ongoing tensions with Russia.  
  • In Morocco, a feminist activist was sentenced to prison for blasphemy after wearing a T-shirt bearing slogans against violence towards women.   

Larson, et al. (eds.), “Gender and Equality in Muslim Family Law”

Next month, I.B. Tauris Publishers will publish Gender and Equality in Muslim Family Law: Justice and Ethics in the Islamic Legal Process edited by Lena Larsen, Ziba Mir-Hosseini, Christian Moe and Kari Vogt.  The publisher’s description follows.

This book examines how male authority is sustained through law and court practice, the consequences for women and the family, and the demands made by Muslim women’s groups. Examining the construction of male guardianship (qiwama, wilaya) in the Islamic tradition, it also seeks to create an argument for women’s full equality before the law. Bringing together renowned Muslim scholars and experts, anthropologists who have carried out fieldwork in family courts, and human rights and women’s rights activists from different parts of the Muslim world, from Morocco to Egypt and Iran, this book develops a framework for rethinking Islamic Law and its traditions in ways that reflect contemporary realities and understandings of justice and gender rights.