Reforming Family Law: Social and Political Change in Jordan and Morocco

Author:   Dörthe Engelcke (Max-Planck-Institut für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht, Germany)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Volume:   55
ISBN:  

9781108496612


Pages:   284
Publication Date:   07 March 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Reforming Family Law: Social and Political Change in Jordan and Morocco


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Author:   Dörthe Engelcke (Max-Planck-Institut für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht, Germany)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Volume:   55
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.520kg
ISBN:  

9781108496612


ISBN 10:   110849661
Pages:   284
Publication Date:   07 March 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

'With a highly engaging writing style, Doerthe Engelcke takes us into the heart of family law reform in Jordan and Morocco. She shows how these two seemingly similar monarchies faced similar problems at the same time and yet ended with very different results. The book blends the best of political science, law, and anthropology with incisive analysis and insights from extensive fieldwork.' Kristen Stilt, Harvard University, Massachusetts and author of Islamic Law in Action 'Engelcke's comprehensive approach ... shows that a different history marked by a distinct break with past foreign dominations - the Ottomans, French or British colonial rule - has shaped the current legal and judicial system ... Engelcke's book is an important and most welcome contribution to the understanding of law making and reform processes in Arab monarchies as well as republics in the Middle East and North Africa.' Irene Schneider, University of Goettingen 'Based on an award winning doctoral thesis, Reforming Family Law provides a remarkable insight into the mechanics and reasons for the relative successes and failures of the efforts to reform family law in Morocco and Jordan. Based on meticulous fieldwork in both countries, it sets out clearly and persuasively how and why Morocco was able to liberalise successfully its family code in 2004 when efforts to achieve the same in Jordan over the same period fell short despite the two countries having so much in common. Engelcke deftly explores and explains the various factors that influenced the process in the two states producing a study that makes not only a major contribution to the study of legal reform in the Arab world but also offers valuable perspectives on gender, society, governance and politics in the region.' Michael Willis, University of Oxford 'Even a casual reader will be impressed by the depth of the research and the breadth of the expertise on display in this book. But a careful reader will be even more profoundly rewarded. Engelcke provides a model of how to study family law, carefully examining the text without ever losing sight of the political and historical context. In understanding the diverse ways laws work - and how they might be changed - she shows how we need to integrate our understanding of what the law says with the surprising complexities of how it developed over time and who is deploying it today.' Nathan Brown, George Washington University 'Reforming Family Law will be a great resource to Middle East studies scholars. It is clear that the book is the result of meticulous research ... And one of the strengths of the book comes from the semi-structured interviews with judges, clerks, and members of religious and civil government units, women's groups, and Islamist organizations that animate and challenge state narratives about family law reform. The book will prove generative in both undergraduate and graduate seminars on the Middle East and North Africa.' Eda Pepi, International Journal of Middle East Studies


Advance praise: 'Even a casual reader will be impressed by the depth of the research and the breadth of the expertise on display in this book. But a careful reader will be even more profoundly rewarded. Engelcke provides a model of how to study family law, carefully examining the text without ever losing sight of the political and historical context. In understanding the diverse ways laws work - and how they might be changed - she shows how we need to integrate our understanding of what the law says with the surprising complexities of how it developed over time and who is deploying it today.' Nathan Brown, George Washington University Advance praise: 'Engelcke's comprehensive approach ... shows that a different history marked by a distinct break with past foreign dominations - the Ottomans, French or British colonial rule - has shaped the current legal and judicial system ... Engelcke's book is an important and most welcome contribution to the understanding of law making and reform process in Arab monarchies as well as states in the Middle East and North Africa.' Irene Schneider, University of Goettingen Advance praise: 'Based on an award winning doctoral thesis, Reforming Family Law provides a remarkable insight into the mechanics and reasons for the relative successes and failures of the efforts to reform family law in Morocco and Jordan. Based on meticulous fieldwork in both countries, it sets out clearly and persuasively how and why Morocco was able to liberalise successfully its family code in 2004 when efforts to achieve the same in Jordan over the same period fell short despite the two countries having so much in common. Engelcke deftly explores and explains the various factors that influenced the process in the two states producing a study that makes not only a major contribution to the study of legal reform in the Arab world but also offers valuable perspectives on gender, society, governance and politics in the region.' Michael Willis, University of Oxford Advance praise: `Even a casual reader will be impressed by the depth of the research and the breadth of the expertise on display in this book. But a careful reader will be even more profoundly rewarded. Engelcke provides a model of how to study family law, carefully examining the text without ever losing sight of the political and historical context. In understanding the diverse ways laws work - and how they might be changed - she shows how we need to integrate our understanding of what the law says with the surprising complexities of how it developed over time and who is deploying it today.' Nathan Brown, George Washington University Advance praise: `Engelcke's comprehensive approach ... shows that a different history marked by a distinct break with past foreign dominations - the Ottomans, French or British colonial rule - has shaped the current legal and judicial system ... Engelcke's book is an important and most welcome contribution to the understanding of law making and reform process in Arab monarchies as well as states in the Middle East and North Africa.' Irene Schneider, University of Goettingen Advance praise: `Based on an award winning doctoral thesis, Reforming Family Law provides a remarkable insight into the mechanics and reasons for the relative successes and failures of the efforts to reform family law in Morocco and Jordan. Based on meticulous fieldwork in both countries, it sets out clearly and persuasively how and why Morocco was able to liberalise successfully its family code in 2004 when efforts to achieve the same in Jordan over the same period fell short despite the two countries having so much in common. Engelcke deftly explores and explains the various factors that influenced the process in the two states producing a study that makes not only a major contribution to the study of legal reform in the Arab world but also offers valuable perspectives on gender, society, governance and politics in the region.' Michael Willis, University of Oxford


Advance praise: 'Even a casual reader will be impressed by the depth of the research and the breadth of the expertise on display in this book. But a careful reader will be even more profoundly rewarded. Engelcke provides a model of how to study family law, carefully examining the text without ever losing sight of the political and historical context. In understanding the diverse ways laws work - and how they might be changed - she shows how we need to integrate our understanding of what the law says with the surprising complexities of how it developed over time and who is deploying it today.' Nathan Brown, George Washington University Advance praise: 'Engelcke's comprehensive approach ... shows that a different history marked by a distinct break with past foreign dominations - the Ottomans, French or British colonial rule - has shaped the current legal and judicial system ... Engelcke's book is an important and most welcome contribution to the understanding of law making and reform processes in Arab monarchies as well as republics in the Middle East and North Africa.' Irene Schneider, University of Goettingen Advance praise: 'Based on an award winning doctoral thesis, Reforming Family Law provides a remarkable insight into the mechanics and reasons for the relative successes and failures of the efforts to reform family law in Morocco and Jordan. Based on meticulous fieldwork in both countries, it sets out clearly and persuasively how and why Morocco was able to liberalise successfully its family code in 2004 when efforts to achieve the same in Jordan over the same period fell short despite the two countries having so much in common. Engelcke deftly explores and explains the various factors that influenced the process in the two states producing a study that makes not only a major contribution to the study of legal reform in the Arab world but also offers valuable perspectives on gender, society, governance and politics in the region.' Michael Willis, University of Oxford Advance praise: 'With a highly engaging writing style, Doerthe Engelcke takes us into the heart of family law reform in Jordan and Morocco. She shows how these two seemingly similar monarchies faced similar problems at the same time and yet ended with very different results. The book blends the best of political science, law, and anthropology with incisive analysis and insights from extensive fieldwork.' Kristen Stilt, Harvard University and author of Islamic Law in Action Advance praise: `Even a casual reader will be impressed by the depth of the research and the breadth of the expertise on display in this book. But a careful reader will be even more profoundly rewarded. Engelcke provides a model of how to study family law, carefully examining the text without ever losing sight of the political and historical context. In understanding the diverse ways laws work - and how they might be changed - she shows how we need to integrate our understanding of what the law says with the surprising complexities of how it developed over time and who is deploying it today.' Nathan Brown, George Washington University Advance praise: `Engelcke's comprehensive approach ... shows that a different history marked by a distinct break with past foreign dominations - the Ottomans, French or British colonial rule - has shaped the current legal and judicial system ... Engelcke's book is an important and most welcome contribution to the understanding of law making and reform processes in Arab monarchies as well as republics in the Middle East and North Africa.' Irene Schneider, University of Goettingen Advance praise: `Based on an award winning doctoral thesis, Reforming Family Law provides a remarkable insight into the mechanics and reasons for the relative successes and failures of the efforts to reform family law in Morocco and Jordan. Based on meticulous fieldwork in both countries, it sets out clearly and persuasively how and why Morocco was able to liberalise successfully its family code in 2004 when efforts to achieve the same in Jordan over the same period fell short despite the two countries having so much in common. Engelcke deftly explores and explains the various factors that influenced the process in the two states producing a study that makes not only a major contribution to the study of legal reform in the Arab world but also offers valuable perspectives on gender, society, governance and politics in the region.' Michael Willis, University of Oxford Advance praise: 'With a highly engaging writing style, Doerthe Engelcke takes us into the heart of family law reform in Jordan and Morocco. She shows how these two seemingly similar monarchies faced similar problems at the same time and yet ended with very different results. The book blends the best of political science, law, and anthropology with incisive analysis and insights from extensive fieldwork.' Kristen Stilt, Harvard University and author of Islamic Law in Action


Author Information

Dörthe Engelcke is a senior research fellow at the Max-Planck-Institut für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht, Germany. She received her Ph.D. from St Antony's College, University of Oxford, in 2015 and was the co-winner of the 2016 BRISMES Leigh Douglas Memorial Prize for the best Ph.D. dissertation on a Middle Eastern topic awarded by a British University. Engelcke has held fellowships at the Islamic Legal Studies Program at Harvard Law School and the Lichtenberg-Kolleg, the Göttingen Institute of Advanced Study.

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