Abstract:Whilst much of the literature focuses on debating polygamy as a harmful practice, the purpose of this paper is to consider a different form of harm by exploring judicial responses to this relationship and the women who engage with it. Over the years, the courts have been faced with numerous questions on the recognition and regulation of polygamous marriages. Commencing with an overview of existing literature on polygamous marriage, I situate and explain the post-colonial feminist-inspired conceptual framework … Show more
“…Non-marriage is a judicial concept developed through common law. The most effective way to understand its development and application is to look at what is being said and done in the courts because judges are active agents who represent mainstream understandings and as a result reproduce orientalist, racialised and Christian discourses (Herman, 2011;Naqvi, 2017). I have analysed over forty case law reports that I sourced on the legal database Westlaw using the keywords 'non-marriage' and 'non-qualifying ceremony'.…”
In this article I argue that the judicial concept of non-marriage racialises and orientalises minoritised communities and their marriages. Applying a critical postcolonial lens, I show how the development of non-marriage has been influenced by colonial racialising attitudes towards marriage. This has led to its application in racist and orientalist ways to demean and other minoritised marriage practices. My analysis of the case law exposes three patterns in the judicial discourse in this area. First, that the courts emphasise “English (Christian) marriage” and its supposed hallmarks when deciding if a ceremony is non-existent; second that judgments foreground the technical, formal aspects of the law obscuring the use of personal judicial opinions which are orientalist. Finally, the application of this concept to playacting, sham and forced marriages at the same time as legitimate minoritised marriage practices is demeaning and insulting to the already marginalised communities that practise them.
“…Non-marriage is a judicial concept developed through common law. The most effective way to understand its development and application is to look at what is being said and done in the courts because judges are active agents who represent mainstream understandings and as a result reproduce orientalist, racialised and Christian discourses (Herman, 2011;Naqvi, 2017). I have analysed over forty case law reports that I sourced on the legal database Westlaw using the keywords 'non-marriage' and 'non-qualifying ceremony'.…”
In this article I argue that the judicial concept of non-marriage racialises and orientalises minoritised communities and their marriages. Applying a critical postcolonial lens, I show how the development of non-marriage has been influenced by colonial racialising attitudes towards marriage. This has led to its application in racist and orientalist ways to demean and other minoritised marriage practices. My analysis of the case law exposes three patterns in the judicial discourse in this area. First, that the courts emphasise “English (Christian) marriage” and its supposed hallmarks when deciding if a ceremony is non-existent; second that judgments foreground the technical, formal aspects of the law obscuring the use of personal judicial opinions which are orientalist. Finally, the application of this concept to playacting, sham and forced marriages at the same time as legitimate minoritised marriage practices is demeaning and insulting to the already marginalised communities that practise them.
“…This application of the Directive does not verify whether the rights of the additional spouse were more effectively respected by rejection or approval of the application, for instance through providing the spouse with a procedural option to rebut the presumption of involuntary marriage. The rule thus most often harmfully impacts the women who are additional spouses (Stybnarova, 2020; Naqvi, 2017).…”
Section: Case Study 1: Equality Of the Sexes And The Protection Of Women As An Aim Of Current Migration Law-making In Eu And Denmarkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Limiting options for family reunification with the given measures in effect curtails the immigration of certain classes of migrants, particularly Muslims (Shah, 2003), but above all the women whose equality was of concern to the legislators (Case Study 1). Moreover, the measures adopted do not result in meaningful consent (Stybnarova, 2020; Naqvi, 2017).…”
This article investigates continuities in migration law-making that claims to aim at protecting women but in effect is a tokenist strategy excluding non-Western female migrants. It shows that despite developments in the legal recognition of women’s equality, present restrictions on family reunification in Western Europe, illustrated through the EU and Danish migration laws, echo law-making in the late 19th-century US, exemplified in the process of adopting the Page Act, which also introduced stricter rules for female migrants under the stated objective of protecting women. Using the social theory of articulation, the article demonstrates how legislators continuously articulate and rearticulate the wellbeing of migrant women to legitimize discriminatory migration rules regardless of how highly women’s rights are respected in law and society. The article contributes to previous feminist scholarship in migration law by showing the continuity and intentionality of the articulative practices in law-making directed at migrant women.
“…8 The negative responses of national courts to polygamous marriages in the first half of the 20 th century corresponded with typically superior colonial approaches to the colonialised countries' cultures to the extent that they did not comply with Christian values. 9 In that period, regulation of polygamous marriages in countries without a stronger colonial outreach, e.g. in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, was accordingly restrictive for the reason of superiority of Christian morality 10 but also potentially as a legacy of historically conflicting relation to the Ottoman empire.…”
Section: History Of Recognising Polygamous Marriages Under the Common European Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The legitimacy of the aim to enhance rights-based value of protection of women while limiting rights and freedoms of spouses in polygamous marriages has been questioned by studies on cultural bias behind the concept of human rights 41 or even more specifically, cultural bias behind the approach of Western courts to polygamy. 42 In spite of the change in the substantial argumentation against recognition of these marriages, the rejection of recognition of polygamy has always been and is still now underlined by the idea that Western values are superior to Islamic values. 43…”
Section: Teleology Of Non-recognition Of Polygamous Marriages As a Ground For Family Reunificationmentioning
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