A STEP TOO FAR? THE JOURNEY FROM "BIOLOGICAL" TO "SOCIETAL" FILIATION IN THE CHILD'S RIGHT TO NAME AND IDENTITY IN ISLAMIC AND INTERNATIONAL LAW

This socio-legal narrative investigates the journey from "biological" to "societal" filiation undertaken by Islamic and international law regimes in their endeavors to ensure a child's right to name and identity. Combining a discussion of filiation—a status-assigning process...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of law and religion
1. VerfasserIn: Ali, Shaheen Sardar 1955- (VerfasserIn)
Medienart: Elektronisch Aufsatz
Sprache:Englisch
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Veröffentlicht: Cambridge Univ. Press [2019]
In: Journal of law and religion
Jahr: 2019, Band: 34, Heft: 3, Seiten: 383-407
normierte Schlagwort(-folgen):B Islamisches Recht / Abstammungsrecht / Kind / Menschenrecht / Soziale Identität
RelBib Classification:AD Religionssoziologie; Religionspolitik
BJ Islam
XA Recht
weitere Schlagwörter:B Muslim state practice
B Islamic Law
B Convention on the rights of the child
B Filiation
B child rights
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Zusammenfassung:This socio-legal narrative investigates the journey from "biological" to "societal" filiation undertaken by Islamic and international law regimes in their endeavors to ensure a child's right to name and identity. Combining a discussion of filiation—a status-assigning process—with adoption and kafāla (fostering) as status-transferring mechanisms, it highlights a nuanced hierarchy relating to these processes within Muslim communities and Muslim state practices. It questions whether evolving conceptions of a child's rights to name and identity represent a paradigm shift from "no status" if born out of wedlock toward "full status" offered through national and international law and Muslim state and community practices. The article challenges the dominant (formal, legal) position within the Islamic legal traditions that nasab (filiation) is obtainable through marriage alone. Highlighting inherent plurality within the Islamic legal traditions, it demonstrates how Muslim state practice and actual practices of Muslim communities on the subject are neither uniform nor necessarily in accordance with stated doctrinal positions of the juristic schools to which they subscribe. Simultaneously, the paper challenges some exaggerated gaps between "Islamic" and "Western" conceptions of children's rights, arguing that child-centric resources in Islamic law tend to be suppressed by a "universalist" Western human-rights discourse. Tracing common threads through discourses within both legal traditions aimed at ensuring children a name and identity, it demonstrates that the rights values in the United Nations Convention on Rights of the Child resonate with preexisting values within the Islamic legal traditions.
ISSN:2163-3088
Enthält:Enthalten in: Journal of law and religion
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1017/jlr.2019.44