Prof. Ahmed Fekry Ibrahim (McGill University): Care of Neglected Children in Islamic Law: The Destigmatization of Non-Normative Childhood

Afternoon Talk on Islamic Law

  • Datum: 27.06.2017
  • Uhrzeit: 16:00

About the Speaker:
Ahmed Fekry Ibrahim is an assistant professor of Islamic law at McGill University’s Institute of Islamic Studies in Montreal, Canada. Heholdsa BA from al-Azhar University, an MA from the American University in Cairo, and a PhD in Islamic Studies from Georgetown University (2011). In 2011–12, Ibrahimreceived a EUME postdoctoral fellowship from the Berlin research program “Europe in the Middle East—The Middle East in Europe,” organized by Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Fritz Thyssen Stiftung, and Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin. Histeaching and research interests include the formation of Islamic law, legal theory, Islamic legal practice in Mamluk and Ottoman courts, Islamic law and human rights, customary law, and family law. He hasrecently completed a study on the theory andpractice of child custodywhich examined howsocial perceptions of the family and the child’s best interests influenced judicial practice in early modern Ottoman Egypt. Currently, Ibrahim isworking on two projects entitled, “Judicial Custom in Islamic Law,” and “Child Adoption in Early Modern Egypt.”

About the Topic:
According to Islamic juristic discourse, both marriage and biology are essential to a child receiving full rights including a family name and inheritance rights –both of which are often considered part of the child’s best interests in Euro-American adoption. Due to this requirement of marriage and biology, some Muslim children are placed at a disadvantage by virtue of the circumstances of their birth. In this discussion, I address the normative Muslim family, as well as other categories of children who are at a disadvantage and discuss the ways in which premodern Ottoman Egyptian children were cared for by the state and community. I hope that the findings of this research will offer insights into how to remove the stigma associated with some categories of children in Muslim societies today, destigmatizing adoption in Muslim societies where it is prohibited in theory. As we shall see in our discussion, this prohibition was only an ideal doctrine that was openly subverted by jurists and judges in Ottoman Egypt.

Zur Redakteursansicht