Volume 18 of The Jewish Law Annual contains six comprehensive
articles on various aspects of Jewish law. Three articles address
family law. One addresses the painful issue of the plight of the
wife whose husband withholds conjugal relations. In a marriage
where relations are withheld, the wife may seek a divorce, while
her husband may withhold divorce. Prolonged withholding of divorce
renders the wife an agunah, that is, a wife chained to a dead
marriage and unable to start anew and rebuild her life. The author
explores the halakhic feasibility of allowing a wife in such a
predicament to bring a claim for damages against her husband for
infliction of mental distress. If such claims are allowed,
recalcitrant husbands may rethink their intransigence and consent
to grant the divorce.
Another article examines the evolution of halakhic thinking on
the parent child relationship. It traces the stages by which
halakhic family law changed from a basically patriarchal system in
which both mother and the child were deemed subject to the father s
will, to a more balanced system where wife and husband have equal
standing with respect to custody matters, and the best interest of
the child is the main consideration in custody proceedings.
In another article, halakhic attitudes to corporal punishment of
children are analyzed. The author explores whether the "Spare the
rod and spoil the child" adage, which is based on a verse from
Proverbs, indeed reflects the position of Jewish law. He shows that
in fact, while recourse to corporal punishment for educational
purposes is permitted--subject to detailed qualifications that
greatly limit its scope--two divergent approaches to corporal
punishment can be discerned in the halakhic sources. One maintains
that administration of corporal punishment can be a useful
pedagogic tool of last resort, whereas the other seeks to minimize
recourse to corporal punishment in the educational context,
questioning its efficacy. The article shows that in any event, the
notion that corporal punishment is required by the law, as some,
invoking the "spare the rod" maxim, have maintained, is by no means
borne out by the halakhic literature.
The volume also features a fascinating article on the history of
two societies founded in London to further the study of Jewish law
using modern scholarly methodologies. One society was active at the
end of the 1920s and beginning of the 1930s, the second was active
a decade later. The article explains the background to the
establishment of the societies and analyzes the societies
objectives, leaders and memberships. Both societies were founded
with the intention of reformulating the classic halakhic sources in
a manner that would render them suitable for contemporary
application in the nascent Jewish state. But as the author shows,
ultimately much of their energy was devoted to presenting the said
sources to the non-Jewish legal world, for the purpose of
reciprocal enrichment and edification.
Rounding out the volume are two jurisprudential studies on
classic legal problems. The first explores the prohibition against
seeking a second legal ruling when a ruling declaring something
forbidden has been handed down. What is the scope of this rule, and
in what ways does it differ from the res judicata principle in
western law? The author shows that both procedural and substantive
readings of the prohibition were put forward in the talmudic
commentaries, and explains the jurisprudential implications of
these different readings.
The second article examines the question of the agent who
breaches his principal s trust, focusing on the case of the agent
who executes the act he was sent to carry out, but does so for
himself, rather than his principal. To what extent is he liable for
ensuing damages to the principal, and is his act invariably deemed
reprehensible? Another issue is the legal status of the transaction
carried out by such an agent. Do the rights and obligations
generated by the transaction accrue to the agent, or to the
principal? And how are determinations as to the status of the
transaction to be made? Is the testimony of an unfaithful agent, or
one who has deviated from his mandate, deemed trustworthy? Is any
role played by third parties, such as vendors, in determining the
status of the transaction?
General
Imprint: |
Routledge-Cavendish
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Series: |
Jewish Law Annual |
Release date: |
March 2010 |
First published: |
2010 |
Editors: |
Berachyahu Lifshitz
|
Dimensions: |
234 x 156 x 23mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover
|
Pages: |
328 |
Edition: |
New |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-415-57404-4 |
Categories: |
Books >
Sport & Leisure >
Miscellaneous items >
General
|
LSN: |
0-415-57404-8 |
Barcode: |
9780415574044 |
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