TY - JOUR
T1 - Undignified Jurispathy
T2 - Muslim Family Law at Ghanaian Courts
AU - Sezgin, Yuksel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Bar Foundation.
PY - 2023/11/12
Y1 - 2023/11/12
N2 - Ghana has inherited colonial legislation that recognizes and regulates the consequences of Muslim family law (MFL). However, in practice, courts almost never recognize the normative existence of MFL and systematically dismiss the cases on procedural grounds without discussing their merits. What explains the judiciary's attitudes toward Islamic law? Why do Ghanaian courts refuse to engage with MFL in substantive terms? How does this judicial policy affect Ghana's pluri-legal system and its multireligious democracy? Drawing on Robert Cover's insights and concepts from Nomos and Narrative, the present article suggests that Ghanaian courts engage in undignified jurispathy against Islamic law. Having inherited the colonial narrative that Islamic law is not a native law of the land, the judiciary destroys the legal meanings built around Islamic law without discussing what is at stake. This perpetuates normative tensions between the state and Muslim groups, undermines the rule of law, and erodes public trust in democratic institutions. Utilizing the theoretical and empirical insights drawn from the Ghanaian case, the article urges scholars to expand the scope of their inquiries to include instances of undignified jurispathy to better understand state-religion relations and constitutional debates in pluri-legal societies.
AB - Ghana has inherited colonial legislation that recognizes and regulates the consequences of Muslim family law (MFL). However, in practice, courts almost never recognize the normative existence of MFL and systematically dismiss the cases on procedural grounds without discussing their merits. What explains the judiciary's attitudes toward Islamic law? Why do Ghanaian courts refuse to engage with MFL in substantive terms? How does this judicial policy affect Ghana's pluri-legal system and its multireligious democracy? Drawing on Robert Cover's insights and concepts from Nomos and Narrative, the present article suggests that Ghanaian courts engage in undignified jurispathy against Islamic law. Having inherited the colonial narrative that Islamic law is not a native law of the land, the judiciary destroys the legal meanings built around Islamic law without discussing what is at stake. This perpetuates normative tensions between the state and Muslim groups, undermines the rule of law, and erodes public trust in democratic institutions. Utilizing the theoretical and empirical insights drawn from the Ghanaian case, the article urges scholars to expand the scope of their inquiries to include instances of undignified jurispathy to better understand state-religion relations and constitutional debates in pluri-legal societies.
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U2 - 10.1017/lsi.2022.29
DO - 10.1017/lsi.2022.29
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85185818699
SN - 0897-6546
VL - 48
SP - 1303
EP - 1333
JO - Law and Social Inquiry
JF - Law and Social Inquiry
IS - 4
ER -