Fallen through the cracks : Unregistered Islamic marriages in England and Wales, and the future of legislative reform

Fallen through the cracks : Unregistered Islamic marriages in England and Wales, and the future of legislative reform

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 158 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781912581160

Full Description

A significant number of Muslim women in the United Kingdom are in unregistered religious-only
marriages, many of whom will be unaware that they lack legal protections and access to marital
rights.
In this report, Emma Webb examines how the asymmetric nature of those sometimes polygamous
marriages and Islamic divorce - which allows a man to instantaneously divorce his wife but makes it
much harder for the wife to initiate divorce - leaves women in a precarious situation. They face the
consequences of sudden divorce and being left without financial assets or property, destitute and
without support in their own communities. The sharia councils they turn to have been known to
perpetuate the abuse and discrimination already suffered by some women.
On the basis of testimonies, case studies, interviews and a review of legislative proposals, the report
makes several recommendations, including to amend current legislation to make mandatory the
registration of all religious marriages in the England and Wales, in line with the proposed Marriage
Act 1949 (Amendment) Bill - and to extend the Divorce (Religious Marriages) Act 2002 to cover
Islamic divorces, as was previously achieved for the Jewish community.
'I strongly commend this timely report. The women who have shared their stories have risked much. I
hope that their courage will not be in vain - and that Government legislation will at last be
introduced with great urgency, as so many Muslim women in this country are suffering in ways that
would make our Suffragettes turn in their graves.' Baroness Cox of Queensbury
'This report is an important contribution to a sensitive and vexed subject. Respect for religious and
cultural traditions sometimes brings conflict with the law of the land. The report faces these issues
head-on, and makes an important contribution to a difficult debate.' Lord Carlile of Berriew CBE QC

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