"'Please Give Me My Voice": Women's Out-of-Court Divorce in a Secondary City in Senegal Articles
Overview
published in
- Islamic Africa Journal
publication date
- June 2021
start page
- 163
end page
- 183
issue
- 2
volume
- 11
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 2333-262X
abstract
- Divorce is not uncommon among Muslims in Senegal and tends to take place outside of court, even if the Senegalese Family Code has made out-of-court divorce illegal. Yet little is known about how women in particular may obtain divorce outside of the court. This article provides ethnographic material on the way women divorce out-of-court, and the repertoires of justification they draw on. In line with scholarly work on women¿s use of Islamic courts in other countries the article foregrounds women's agency, yet in a different out-of-court context. First, it is shown that women draw on multiple, gendered, repertoires. Second, it is argued that because family members play a central role in the divorces studied, the analysis of women's agency requires an attentiveness to kin and women's "kinwork".
Classification
subjects
- Sociology
keywords
- senegal; family law; divorce; women; gender; islamic law; kinship; tradition; custom