(Sub)alternative Muslim Perceptions of Law and Justice: Beyond Politics of Fiqh and Inadequacy of Human Rights Discourse

This paper comparatively examines some present-day perceptions of the concepts of law and justice by sexually- and/or gender-variant Muslim communities, living in Muslim-majority states. Firstly, it analyses their encounters with two hegemonic identitarian/ideological discourses: that of Muslim theo...

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Main Author: Hamzić, Vanja
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/16994/
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spelling ftsoaslib:oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:16994 2023-07-30T03:56:57+02:00 (Sub)alternative Muslim Perceptions of Law and Justice: Beyond Politics of Fiqh and Inadequacy of Human Rights Discourse Hamzić, Vanja 2011-05 https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/16994/ unknown Hamzić, Vanja (2011) (Sub)alternative Muslim Perceptions of Law and Justice: Beyond Politics of Fiqh and Inadequacy of Human Rights Discourse. In: Queer Perspectives on Law: Sharing Reflections, SOAS Spring Queer Legal Theory Workshop, May 2011, SOAS, University of London. (Unpublished) HN Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform HT Communities. Classes. Races JQ Political institutions (Asia Africa Australia) JV Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration K Law (General) KL Asia and Eurasia Pacific Area and Antarctica Conference or Workshop Items NonPeerReviewed 2011 ftsoaslib 2023-07-11T20:18:06Z This paper comparatively examines some present-day perceptions of the concepts of law and justice by sexually- and/or gender-variant Muslim communities, living in Muslim-majority states. Firstly, it analyses their encounters with two hegemonic identitarian/ideological discourses: that of Muslim theopolitical reductionism and that of the exclusionary neoliberal homonormative identity politics. Secondly, the paper discusses the strategies devised to resist these hegemonic currents and to negotiate the communities’ own takes on law (including both on Islamic legal tradition and on international human rights law) and justice (including concepts such as social and gender justice). Thirdly, it is argued that concepts of law and justice, as re-claimed and re-developed by sexually - and/or gender-variant Muslim communities – notwithstanding their respective national, cultural and religious specificities – not only challenge the two identified hegemonic discourses, but also test the limits of global movements/disciplines developed, inter alia, as the critical alternatives to those two oppressive identitarian ideologies. Those include queer theory, in its capacity (or the lack thereof) to represent or research the communities whose intrinsic ties transcend the sexuality/gender scripts, and the dominant human rights discourse, in its reliance on rigid legalism inapt to accommodate more nuanced social justice claims. Conference Object Antarc* Antarctica School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London: SOAS Research Online Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London: SOAS Research Online
op_collection_id ftsoaslib
language unknown
topic HN Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform
HT Communities. Classes. Races
JQ Political institutions (Asia
Africa
Australia)
JV Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration
K Law (General)
KL Asia and Eurasia
Pacific Area
and Antarctica
spellingShingle HN Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform
HT Communities. Classes. Races
JQ Political institutions (Asia
Africa
Australia)
JV Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration
K Law (General)
KL Asia and Eurasia
Pacific Area
and Antarctica
Hamzić, Vanja
(Sub)alternative Muslim Perceptions of Law and Justice: Beyond Politics of Fiqh and Inadequacy of Human Rights Discourse
topic_facet HN Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform
HT Communities. Classes. Races
JQ Political institutions (Asia
Africa
Australia)
JV Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration
K Law (General)
KL Asia and Eurasia
Pacific Area
and Antarctica
description This paper comparatively examines some present-day perceptions of the concepts of law and justice by sexually- and/or gender-variant Muslim communities, living in Muslim-majority states. Firstly, it analyses their encounters with two hegemonic identitarian/ideological discourses: that of Muslim theopolitical reductionism and that of the exclusionary neoliberal homonormative identity politics. Secondly, the paper discusses the strategies devised to resist these hegemonic currents and to negotiate the communities’ own takes on law (including both on Islamic legal tradition and on international human rights law) and justice (including concepts such as social and gender justice). Thirdly, it is argued that concepts of law and justice, as re-claimed and re-developed by sexually - and/or gender-variant Muslim communities – notwithstanding their respective national, cultural and religious specificities – not only challenge the two identified hegemonic discourses, but also test the limits of global movements/disciplines developed, inter alia, as the critical alternatives to those two oppressive identitarian ideologies. Those include queer theory, in its capacity (or the lack thereof) to represent or research the communities whose intrinsic ties transcend the sexuality/gender scripts, and the dominant human rights discourse, in its reliance on rigid legalism inapt to accommodate more nuanced social justice claims.
format Conference Object
author Hamzić, Vanja
author_facet Hamzić, Vanja
author_sort Hamzić, Vanja
title (Sub)alternative Muslim Perceptions of Law and Justice: Beyond Politics of Fiqh and Inadequacy of Human Rights Discourse
title_short (Sub)alternative Muslim Perceptions of Law and Justice: Beyond Politics of Fiqh and Inadequacy of Human Rights Discourse
title_full (Sub)alternative Muslim Perceptions of Law and Justice: Beyond Politics of Fiqh and Inadequacy of Human Rights Discourse
title_fullStr (Sub)alternative Muslim Perceptions of Law and Justice: Beyond Politics of Fiqh and Inadequacy of Human Rights Discourse
title_full_unstemmed (Sub)alternative Muslim Perceptions of Law and Justice: Beyond Politics of Fiqh and Inadequacy of Human Rights Discourse
title_sort (sub)alternative muslim perceptions of law and justice: beyond politics of fiqh and inadequacy of human rights discourse
publishDate 2011
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/16994/
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation Hamzić, Vanja (2011) (Sub)alternative Muslim Perceptions of Law and Justice: Beyond Politics of Fiqh and Inadequacy of Human Rights Discourse. In: Queer Perspectives on Law: Sharing Reflections, SOAS Spring Queer Legal Theory Workshop, May 2011, SOAS, University of London. (Unpublished)
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