Justice Syed Mansoor Ali Shah (formerly Supreme Court of Pakistan) and Muhammad Zubair Abbasi (Royal Holloway, University of London): The Supreme Court of Pakistan’s Ruling on Women’s Right to Maintenance: Justice Shah and Zubair Abbasi in Conversation
Private Law in Context Across Asia and North Africa
- Datum: 15.12.2025
- Uhrzeit: 16:00
- Ort: Online-Veranstaltung
Der Vortrag findet auf Englisch statt!
About the Speakers
Justice Syed Mansoor Ali Shah served as
a Senior Puisne Judge of the Supreme Court of Pakistan and the Chief
Justice of the Lahore High Court. A leading voice in constitutional law,
human rights, and gender equality, inter alia, he has pioneered reforms
emphasizing efficiency, accessibility, and transparency in the justice
system. Justice Shah resigned from the Supreme Court of Pakistan in
November 2025, because “continuing to serve in a court deprived of its
constitutional jurisdiction would amount to acquiescence in a
constitutional wrong”. Albeit in line for the next Chief Justice of
Pakistan, he was excluded through a controversial Constitutional
Amendment altering the Supreme Court’s seniority structure whose
constitutionality is still under judicial challenge.
Dr Muhammad Zubair Abbasi, Lecturer at Royal Holloway, University of
London, is an academic lawyer with expertise in comparative law, Islamic
law, family law, business law, and law and technology. His recent
publications include Family Laws in Pakistan (Oxford University Press,
2024), Democracy under God: Constitutions, Islam, and Human Rights in
the Muslim World (Cambridge University Press, 2023), and ‘Scaling
Artificial Intelligence for Augmented Learning: Developing a Generative
AI Evaluation Scale through a Case Study in Islamic Inheritance Law’
(2025) 3 Journal of Digital Islamicate Research 5-32.
About the Topic
The Supreme Court of Pakistan recently
issued a landmark ruling on women’s right to maintenance, holding that
the obligation to provide financial support arises unconditionally from
the conclusion of a valid marriage and constitutes a binding legal duty.
The Court observed that, in a patriarchal society where economic
dependence often reinforces systemic injustice, the right to maintenance
must be safeguarded as an essential constitutional, legal, and ethical
entitlement. In their talk, Justice Syed Mansoor Ali Shah—one of the
judges who authored the ruling—and Zubair Abbasi, who served as amicus
curiae in the case, examine the Court’s legal reasoning, its conception
of justice, and the evolving role of academic expertise in judicial
deliberations. They situate the decision within broader developments in
Pakistani family law and highlight the Court’s notable openness to
comparative scholarship and international perspectives. Drawing from
their experience, they reflect on the role of academic experts in cases
of public importance.
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