Progressive Realisation of Muslim Family Law: The Case of Tunisia

Authors

  • Ashraf Booley University of the Western Cape

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2019/v22i0a2029

Keywords:

Islam;, women, family law, Code of Personal Status, Tunisia

Abstract

From the time when women's rights were not placed high on the agenda of any state to the time when women's rights are given top priority, Tunisia's gender-friendly legislation requires a fresher look. One would be forgiven for thinking that Tunisia's reforms started after they gained independence from France in the 1950's. In fact, it was during the French Protectorate that reformers started rumours of reform, arguing amongst other issues for affording women more rights than those they were granted under sharia law, which governed family law in Tunisia. After gaining its independence, Tunisia promulgated the Code of Personal Status, which was considered a radical departure from the sharia. It is considered to be the first women-friendly legislation promulgated in the country. It could be argued that Tunisian family law underwent, four waves of reform. The first wave started during the French Protectorate. The second wave started in the 1950's with the codification of Tunisia's family law, which introduced women-friendly legislation. The third wave started in the 1990's with changes to the Code of Personal Status, and the latest wave commenced in 2010. In this article, I analyse the initial, pioneering phases of the reforms resulting from the actions of a newly formed national state interested in building a free society at the end of colonial rule, as well as reforms that have taken place in the modern state since the Arab uprising in Tunisia. As a result of the various waves of reforms, I argue that Tunisia should be seen as the vanguard of women-friendly legislation in the Arab world.

 

GS40.png

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

  • Ashraf Booley, University of the Western Cape
    LLB LLM LLD (University of the Western Cape). Lecturer in the Department of Public Law and Jurisprudence, University of the Western Cape. Email abooley@uwc.ac.za.

References

ACPF In the Best Interests of the Child: Harmonising Laws on Children in Eastern and Southern Africa (ACPF Addis Ababa 2008)

Ali AY The Holy Qurʼān: Text, Translation, and Commentary (Shaikh Muhammad Ashraf Lahore 1938)

Amir AN, Shuriye AO and Ismail AF "Muhammad Abduh's Conrtibution to Modernity" 2012 AJMSE 63-73

Anderson JND "The Tunisian Law of Personal Status" 1958 International and Comparative Law Quarterly 262-279

Angrist MP "The Expression of Political Dissent in the Middle East: Turkish Democratization and Authoritarian Continuity in Tunisia" 1999 CSSH 703-759

Bonderman D "Modernization and Changing Perceptions of Islamic Law" 1968 Harv L Rev 1169-1185

Brand LA Women, the State, and Political Liberalization: Middle Eastern and North African Experiences (Columbia University Press New York 1998)

Buskens L "Recent Debates on Family Law Reform in Morocco: Islamic Law as Politics in an Emerging Public Sphere" 2003 Islamic L & Soc'y 70-131

Catroux G "France, Tunisia and Morocco" 1954 International Journal 282-294

Camilleri C "Modernity and the Tunisian Family in Tunisia" 1967 JMF 590-595

Charrad MM "State and Gender in the Maghrib" 1990 Mar/Apr Middle East Report 1-34

Charrad MM "Policy Shifts: State, Islam, and Gender in Tunisia, 1930s-1990s" 1997 Social Politics 284-319

Charrad MM "Tunisia at the Forefront of the Arab World: Two Waves of Gender Legislation" 2007 Wash & Lee L Rev 1513-1527

Charrad MM "Family Law Reforms in the Arab World: Tunisia and Morocco" Report for the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA), Division for Social Policy and Development, Expert Group Meeting (15-17 May 2012 New York)

Chekir H "Women, the Law, and the Family in Tunisia" 1996 Gender and Development 43-46

Grami A "Gender Equality in Tunisia" 2008 BJMES 349-361

Jansen Y "Muslim Brides and the Ghost of the Shari'a: Have the Recent Law Reforms in Egypt, Tunisia and Morocco Improved Women's Position in Marriage and Divorce, and can Religious Moderates Bring Reform and Make it Stick?" 2007 Nw U J Int'l Hum Rts 181-212

Kallander AA Women, Gender, and the Palace Households in Ottoman Tunisia (University of Texas Press Austin 2013)

Katz JG "Regulating Islam: Religion and the State in Contemporary Morocco and Tunisia" 2018 JNAS 1-4

Khedher R "Tracing the Development of the Tunisian 1956 Code of Personal Status" 2017 JIWS 30-37

Mashhour A "Islamic Law and Gender Equality: Could There be a Common Ground? A Study of Divorce and Polygamy in Sharia Law and Contemporary Legislation in Tunisia and Egypt" 2005 Hum Rts Q 562-596

Mayer E "Reform of Personal Status in North Africa: A Problem of Islamic or Mediterranean Laws?" 1995 Middle East J 432-446

McCarthy R "Re-thinking Securalism in Post-independence Tunisia" 2014 Journal of North African Studies 733-750

Moghadam VM "Patriarchy in Transition: Women and the Changing Family in the Middle East" 2004 JCFS 137-162

Omri B "The Status of Women under Tunisian Law" 2004 Journal of Policy Studies 147-149

Sfeir GN "The Tunisian Code of Personal Status (Majallat Al-Ahw Al-Shakhsiy)" 1957 Middle East J 309-318

Saidon R et al "Examining the Policy of Mandatory Premarital HIV Screening Programme for Muslims in Malaysia" 2015 Pertanika Journal Social Science and Humanities 11-142

Sonneveld N "From the Liberation of Women to the Liberation of Men? A Century of Family Law Reform in Egypt" 2017 Religion and Gender 88-104

Tagari H "Personal Family Law Systems: A Comparative and International Human Rights Analysis" 2012 Int J L C 231-252

Weideman J "Tahar Haddad after Bourguiba and Bin Ali: A Reformist between Seuclarists and Islamistst" 2016 IJMES 47-65

Western DJ "Islamic Purse Strings: The Key to the Amelioration of Women's Legal Rights in the Middle East" 2008 A F L Rev 79-135

Voorhoeve M "Judicial Discretion in Tunisian Personal Status Law" in Voorhoeve M (ed) Family Law in Islam: Divorce, Marriage and Women in the Muslim World (Tauris London 2012) 1-35

Voorhoeve M "Law and Social Change in Tunisia: The Case of Unregistered Marriage" 2018 OJLR 479-497

Zeghal M "The Implicit Sharia: Established Religion and Varieties of Secularism in Tunisia" in Fallers Sullivan W and Bearman LG (eds) Varieties of Religious Establishment (Ashgate London 2013) 107-130

Code of Personal Status, 1956

French Civil Code, 2016

Law No. 71, 1992

Law No. 93-74, 1993

Law No. 93-97, 1993

Tunisian Constitution, 2014

Turkish Civil Code, 1924

Anon 2017 Tunisia Lifts Ban on Muslim Women Marrying Non-Muslims https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/09/tunisia-lifts-ban-muslim-women-marrying-muslims-170914154657961.html accessed 5 December 2018

Anon 2017 After Marriage Laws, Tunisia Now Tackles Women's Inheritance Rights https://www.thenational.ae/world/mena/after-marriage-laws-tunisia-now-tackles-women-s-inheritance-rights-1.629020 accessed 21 November 2017

ARIJ 2018 Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism http://en.arij.net accessed 20 May 2018

Bajec A 2018 Tunisian Women Fight for Right to Marry Non-Muslims https://www.alaraby.co.uk/english/indepth/2018/9/25/tunisian-women-stand-up-for-right-to-marry-non-muslims accessed 20 April 2019

Bin Hamid Ali A Date Unknown Tunisia and the Liberation of Muslim Women https://www.themuslim500.com/guest-contributions-2018/tunisia-and-the-liberation-of-muslim-women/ accessed 16 April 2019

Conover-Crockett E 2015 Marriage Culture in Tunisia: Post-Independence to Post-Revolution Shifts https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/isp_collection/2194/ accessed 2 April 2019

De Boer B 2018 Inside Tunisia's Battle over Inter-Religious Marriages https://www.worldcrunch.com/world-affairs/inside-tunisia39s-battle-over-inter-religious-marriages accessed 21 April 2019

Islamic Relief 2018 An Islamic Human Rights Perspective on Early and Forced Marriages: Protecting the Sanctity of Marriage https://www.girlsnotbrides.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/IRW-Islamic-persepctive-on-CM.pdf accessed 22 May 2019

Nadhif A 2017 Tunisian President Calls for Gender Equality in Inheritance Law https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2017/08/equality-in-inheritance-raises-controversy-in-tunisia.html accessed 5 June 2019

Sayed N 2017 Tunisian Opposition Call for Ouster of President Essebsi https://www.egypttoday.com/Article/2/17548/Tunisian-opposition-call-for-ouster-of-President-Essebsi accessed 5 December 2018

Stilt K and Gandhavadi S 2011 Strategies of Muslim Family Law Reform https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1010&context=facultyworkingpapers accessed 5 June 2019

UNICEF 2011 Tunisia - Mena Gender Equality Profile: Status of Girls and Women in the Middle East and North Africa https://www.unicef.org/gender/files/Tunisia-Gender-Eqaulity-Profile-2011.pdf accessed 12 May 2018

Published

24-10-2019

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Booley, A. (2019). Progressive Realisation of Muslim Family Law: The Case of Tunisia. Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal, 22, 1-28. https://doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2019/v22i0a2029

Similar Articles

771-780 of 1177

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.