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States and women's rights: the making of postcolonial Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco
Mounira M. Charrad-
Frontmatter
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List of Maps and Tables (page ix)
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Preface (page xi)
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Acknowledgments (page xiii)
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Note on Foreign Terms and Transliteration (page xvii)
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Introduction (page 1)
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PART 1. SIMILARITIES: COMMON HERITAGE OF THE MAGHRIB (page 15)
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1. State Formation in Kin-Based Societies (page 17)
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2. Islam and Family Law: An Unorthodox View (page 28)
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3. Women Ally with the Devil: Gender, Unity, and Division (page 51)
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4. Men Work with Angels: Power of the Tribe (page 68)
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PART 2. HISTORICAL DIFFERENCES (page 85)
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5. The Precolonial Polity: National Variations (page 87)
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6. Colonial Rule: French Strategies (page 114)
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PART 3. THREE PATHS TO NATION-STATE AND FAMILY LAW (page 145)
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7. Palace, Tribe, and Preservation of Islamic Law: Morocco (page 147)
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8. Elite Divisions and the Law in Gridlock: Algeria (page 169)
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9. State Autonomy from Tribe and Family Law Reform: Tunisia (page 201)
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Conclusion. State-Building, Family Law, and Women's Rights (page 233)
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Glossary (page 243)
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Notes (page 247)
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Selected Bibliography (page 301)
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Author Index (page 319)
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Subject Index (page 327)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
---|---|---|
CS | 31.6 (Nov. 2002): 735-736 | http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0094-3061%28200211%2931%3A6%3C735%3ASAWRTM%3E2.0.CO%3B2-Z |
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Citable Link
Published: c2001
Publisher: University of California Press
- 9780520073234 (hardcover)
- 9780520225763 (paper)
- 9780520935471 (ebook)