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Rosemary Admiral, "Living Law: Women and Legality in Marinid Morocco" (Syracuse UP, 2025)

Sep 29, 2025
Dr. Rosemary Admiral, an assistant professor of history specializing in legal history, unveils the vibrant role of women in shaping legal traditions in Marinid Morocco. She reveals how women, often without formal education, strategically navigated legal systems to secure their rights and address community needs. Using insightful fatwas as evidence, Admiral debunks the myth of a single oppressive Islamic law, showcasing women as active agents who employed negotiation and community support to challenge norms, negotiate marriage terms, and leverage divorce mechanisms.
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INSIGHT

Law As Doctrine Plus Practice

  • Admiral defines Islamic law as both doctrine and its everyday implementation in communities.
  • This broader view reveals support structures like mediation, family networks, and informal jurists.
INSIGHT

Law As A Negotiation Baseline

  • In Marinid Morocco people viewed legal texts as starting points to negotiate for more rights.
  • Negotiation often meant expanding women's rights while constraining men's assumptions of authority.
ADVICE

Use Fatwas As Windows Into Practice

  • Use diverse local legal records like fatwas to reconstruct social legal practice.
  • Seek supporting sources (biographies, histories) because court records are often missing.
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