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Women, Gender

1448. abubakar, Musa Usman. Gender justice in Islamic law. Homicide and bodily injuries. Oxford etc.: Hart Publishing, 2018. 256 pp.

1449. afkhami, Mahnaz (ed.). Faith andfreedom: women’s human rights in the Muslim world.

London: I.B. Tauris, 1995. 256 pp.

1450. behrouz, Andra Nahal. Women's rebellion: towards a new under­standing of domestic violence in Islamic law. UCLA Journal of Islamic and Near Eastern Law, 5 i (2005-2006) pp. 153-177.

1451. chaudhry, Ayesha S. Domestic violence and the Islamic tradi­tion. Ethics, law and the Muslim discourse on gender. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016. 258 pp.

1452. Women’s rights report: discrimination in the punishment of women. Tokyo: Human Rights Now, 2018. 108 pp. [online].

1453. greiff, Shaina. No justice in justifications: violence against women in the name of culture, religion, and tradition. The Global Campaign to Stop Killing and Stoning Women & Women Living Under Muslim Laws, 2010. 44 pp.

1454. hijazy, Ahmed & abdulatif, Bahira M. ^Lapidacion? Mujer drabe, Islamy sociedad. Madrid: Olivum, 2003. 207 pp.

1455. jones-pauly, Christina & dajani tuqan, Abir. Women under Islam. Gender, justice and the politics of Islamic law. London: I.B. Tauris, 2011. 560 pp.

1456. MOSAVI, Maryam. Gender discrimination for religious reasons in Islamic countries and international human rights treaties. Berlin etc.: Peter Lang, 2021. 200 pp. [Also Ph.D. dissertation, Universität Osnabrück, 2020].

1457. QURAISHI-landes, Asifa. What if Sharia weren't the enemy? Rethink­ing international women's rights advocacy on Islamic law. Columbia Journal of Gender and Law, 25 v (2011) pp. 173-249.

1458. QURAISHI-landes, Asifa. Who says Sharfa demands the stoning of women? A description of Islamic law and constitutionalism. Berkeley Journal of Middle Eastern & Islamic Law, 1 (2008) pp.

163-177.

1459. rezaei, Hassan. Searching for the origins of gender violence in the Sharia discourse. Conflicts and conflict resolution in Middle Eastern societies—between tradition and modernity. Ed. Hans-Jorg Albrecht et al. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 2006, pp. 335-346.

1460. Schirrmacher, Christine. Frauen unter der Scharia. Strafrecht und Familienrecht im Islam. Frankfurt: Internationale Gesellschaft für Menschenrechte (igfm), igfm dokumente 1, 2005. 31 pp.

1461. standish, Katerina. Understanding cultural violence and gender: honour killings; dowry murder; the zina ordinance and blood-feuds. Journal of Gender Studies, 23 ii (2014) pp. 111-124.

1462. Women’s rights report: discrimination in the punishment of women. Tokyo: Human Rights Now, 2018. 108 pp.

1463. zuhur, Sharifa. Criminal law, women and sexuality in the Middle East. Deconstructing sexuality in the Middle East: challenges and dis­courses. Ed. Pinar ilkkaracan. Aldershot etc.: Ashgate, 2008, pp. 17-39.

1464. zuhur, Sharifa. Women's crimes and the criminalization of sex. Al-Raida, 23/113 (2006) pp. 28-37.

1465. zuhur, Sharifa. Gender, sexuality and the criminal laws in the Middle East and North Africa: a comparative study. Istanbul, Turkey: Women for Women's Human Rights (wwhr), 2005. 75 pp.

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Source: Kondgen Olaf. A Bibliography of Islamic Criminal Law. Brill,2022. — 468 p.. 2022
More legal literature on Laws.Studio

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  5. Conclusion: Saint Paul, the Language of Gender, and the Philosophical Life of Women
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  7. Ahearne-Kroll Stephen P., Holloway Paul A., Kelhoffer James A. (eds.). Women and Gender in Ancient Religions: Interdisciplinary Approaches. JCB Mohr (Paul Siebeck),2010. — 518 p., 2010
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  11. The Romans, like the Greeks before them, held many traditional ideas about women's behavior and the role women should play in society.
  12. Although the United Nations and the government have exerted painstak­ing efforts to develop women’s rights, there has been and continues to be broad discrimination against the women in all social, economic and cultural aspects of life.
  13. Afrianty Dina. Women and Sharia Law in Northern Indonesia: Local Women's NGOs and the Reform of Islamic Law in Aceh. Routledge,2015. — 202 p., 2015
  14. While men and women are considered equal under the Quran, Muslim women in the twenty-first century are still being burdened by conserva­tive and patriarchal interpretations of the Quran.[943]
  15. Gender Working Group