Book Details
Orange Code:91503
Paperback:418 pages
Publications:
Categories:
Sections:
1. Multi-Tiered Marriage: Reconsidering the Boundaries of civil law and Religion2. Pluralism and Decentralization in Marriage Regulation3. Marriage and the law: Time for a Divorce?4. Unoffiial Family law5. covenant Marriage laws: A Model for compromise6. New York’s Regulation of Jewish Marriage: covenant, contract, or statute?7. Political liberalism, islamic Family law, and Family law Pluralism8. Multi-Tiered Marriages in south Africa9. Ancient and Modern Boundary crossings Between Personal laws and civil law in composite india10. The Perils of Privatized Marriage11. canadian conjugal Mosaic: From Multiculturalism to Multiconjugalism?12. Marriage Pluralism in the United states: on civil and Religious Jurisdiction and the Demands of equal citizenship13. Faith in law? Diffusing Tensions Between Diversity and equality14. . The Frontiers of Marital Pluralism: An Afterword
Description:
American family law makes two key assumptions: first, that the civil state possesses sole authority over marriage and divorce; and second, that the civil law may contain only one regulatory regime for such matters. These assumptions run counter to the multicultural and religiously plural nature of our society. They are also wrong. This book elaborates how those assumptions are descriptively incorrect, and it begins an important conversation about whether more pluralism in family law is normatively desirable. For example, may couples rely upon religious tribunals (Jewish, Muslim, or otherwise) to decide family law disputes? May couples opt into stricter divorce rules, either through premarital contracts or "covenant marriages?" How should the state respond when couples purport to do these things? Intentionally interdisciplinary and international in scope, this volume contains contributions from fourteen leading scholars. The authors address the provocative question of whether the state must consider sharing its jurisdictional authority with other groups in family law
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