“Allāh (God), al-Waṭan (the Nation), al-Malik (the King), and the Role of Ijtihād in Family Law Reforms of Morocco”


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Yavuz Altintaş M.

THE JOURNAL OF THE MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICA, cilt.7, sa.2, ss.207-227, 2016 (Scopus) identifier

Özet

Three key themesIslamic principles, international human rights conventions, and the realities of Moroccan societyframed the Moroccan Family Law (Mudawwana) reform of 2004. However, ijtihd (process of legal reasoning) was the only way to justify the reforms and introduce them on the basis of sharia, which under- lies the Moroccan Family Law. As the highest religious and poli- tical authority in Morocco, the kings authority to exercise ijtihd based on his status as the Commander of the Faithful (Amr al- Muminn) not only legitimized the reform, but also determined its direction. This study examines the role of ijtihd in the Moroccan 2004 reforms by focusing on the perception of ijtihd and its justifications, the position of the Royal Advisory Commission, which was in charge of the reform, and the power of the notion of amr al-muminn, locating the reforms in a context of wider religious restructuring in Morocco.