-
1“...The issue of women serving as judges has been a contentious one in Egyptian society for nearly eight decades. While other Muslim majority countries started...”
-
2“...Women's voices are brought to the fore in this comprehensive analysis of women and social change in North Africa. Focusing on grass-roots perspectives, readers...”
-
3by Sonneveld, Nadia Published in Review of Middle East studies (Tucson, Ariz.) (01.08.2016)“...The marriage was informal, a so-called fatiha marriage in which a union is recognized and celebrated in Rabha's community, but not registered with the relevant...”
-
4by Sonneveld, Nadia Published in Hawwa (Leiden) (28.10.2020)“...Abstract Rather than being an exception, judicial permission for minor marriage has become a rule in Morocco. Based on legal analysis and anthropological...”
-
5by Sonneveld, Nadia Published in Hawwa (Leiden) (01.10.2020)“...Abstract Rather than being an exception, judicial permission for minor marriage has become a rule in Morocco. Based on legal analysis and anthropological...”
-
6by Sonneveld, Nadia Published in Islamic law and society (01.01.2019)“...Abstract This essay focuses on recent divorce reforms in Egypt (2000) and Morocco (2004), with equal attention to the positions of men and women who end their...”
-
7
-
8“...Abstract This special issue of Islamic Law and Society takes a close look at contemporary manifestations of an Islamic divorce procedure known as khulʿ...”
-
9“...This special issue of Islamic Law and Society takes a close look at contemporary manifestations of an Islamic divorce procedure known as khul. Studying khul...”
-
10“...Women Judges in the Muslim World: A Comparative Study of Discourse and Practice offers a socio-legal account of public debates and judicial practices...”
-
12by Sonneveld, Nadia Published in Religion & gender (Utrecht) (01.02.2017)“...To what extent have notions of manhood and womanhood as incorporated in Egyptian Muslim family law changed over the course of almost a century of family law...”
-
13
-
14by Sonneveld, Nadia Published in Anthropology of the Middle East (22.12.2010)“...In the year 2000, Egyptian women were given the right to unilateral divorce through a procedure called khul'. Khul' became the source of much controversy in...”
-
15by Sonneveld, Nadia Published in New Middle Eastern Studies (19.05.2015)“...In 2011, the world witnessed how massive civil resistance by men andwomen alike led to the forced departure of long-serving authoritarian leaders in the...”
-
16
-
17
-
18
-
19“...In the weeks following the Egyptian revolution of 2011, a group of divorced fathersrose to demand a “revolution in family law.” Portraying extant family law...”
-
20