When the Islamic Institute of Civil Justice announced it would
begin offering Sharia-based services in Ontario, a subsequent
provincial government review gave qualified support for religious
arbitration. However, the ensuing debate inflamed the passions of a
wide range of Muslim and non-Muslim groups, garnered worldwide
attention, and led to a ban on religiously based family law
arbitration in the province. Debating Sharia sheds light on how
Ontario's Sharia debate of 2003-2006 exemplified contemporary
concerns regarding religiosity in the public sphere and the place
of Islam in Western nation states.
Focusing on the legal ramifications of Sharia law in the context
of rapidly changing Western liberal democracies, Debating Sharia
approaches the issue from a variety of methodological perspectives,
including policy and media analysis, fieldwork, feminist
examinations of the portrayals of Muslim women, and theoretical
examinations of religion, Sharia, and the law. This volume is an
important read for those who grapple with ethnic and
religio-cultural diversity while remaining committed to religious
freedom and women's equality.
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