Mudawana

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Family law
Entering into marriage
Prenuptial agreement  · Marriage
Common-law marriage
Same-sex marriage
Legal states similar to marriage
Cohabitation  · Civil union
Domestic partnership
Registered partnership
Putative marriage
Dissolution of marriage
Annulment  · Divorce  · Alimony
Issues affecting children
Paternity  · Legitimacy  · Adoption
Legal guardian  · Ward
Emancipation of minors  · Foster care
Child Protective Services
Parental responsibility
Contact (including Visitation)
Residence in English law
Custody  · Child support
Areas of possible legal concern
Spousal abuse  · Child abuse
Child abduction  · Child marriage
Adultery  · Bigamy  · Incest
Conflict of Laws Issues
Marriage  · Nullity  · Divorce

Mudawana (Arabic: مدونة‎) is the family code of Morocco. Based on the Maliki school of Sunni Islam,[1] the code has been praised by human rights activists for its social and religious reform.[2]

Contents

[edit] History

Malik ibn Anas, the founder of the Maliki school of Sunni Islam, wrote Al-Muwatta and Al-Mudawana, the first collections of Muhammad's sayings collected and published by an imam with commentary.[3] Al-Mudawana largely consisted of family law, regulating marriage, inheritance, and child custody. Tamara Sonn, professor of religion and humanities at the College of William and Mary, criticized the book as promoting violence towards, and inequality for, women under Islamic law. In contrast, Sonn commends Morocco's code for the abolishment of the patriarchal family and diction respecting women.[4][2]

[edit] The code

Polygamy, while still allowed, became more difficult under the new Mudawana in 2003. The consent of the first wife becomes obligatory. Couples have to go to a secular court to obtain a divorce rather than just getting a letter of repudiation from a religious official. (See Islamic marital jurisprudence). The parent who keeps custody of the children also keeps the house. The legal age of marriage is 18 instead of 15. Sexual harassment is an offense punished by law. The Mudawana, which was passed by a majority of the members of the Moroccan parliament, has granted women more power. The revision has angered some fundamentalists.{[citation needed]

[edit] Implementation

The Parliament attempted to revise the code several times in the first few years following its establishment, most notably granting women the right to divorce.[5] Parliament revised the code in February 2004, giving royal assent by King Mohammed VI, Morocco's supreme religious leader and head of state.[citation needed]

[edit] Citizenship

King Mohammed VI publicly endorsed amending the code to offer citizenship to the children of Moroccan mothers and foreign fathers in his State of the Nation Address on July 30, 2005. Article 6 of Morocco's 1958 Citizenship Act previously limited citizenship to children born of Moroccan fathers. Exceptions to this rule are children of fathers whose citizenship is unknown or non-existent, or in cases in which the child is between the ages of 16 and 18 and his legal status as a Moroccan is not challenged by the Justice Minister. The King also has the right to grant citizenship to anyone on a case-by-case basis.[6] a modification of the law was submitted for vote in the Moroccan parliament.[citation needed]

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Salih, Rubah (2003). Gender in Transnationalism: Home, Longing and Belonging Among Moroccan Migrant Women, 49. 
  2. ^ a b Sonn, Tamara (2004). A Brief History of Islam, 579. 
  3. ^ Hasyim, Syafiq (2006). Understanding Women in Islam: An Indonesian Perspective, 73. 
  4. ^ Unknown (Unknown). Bio of Tamara Sonn (HTML). Center for Islam and Democracy. Retrieved on 2007-09-07, 2007.
  5. ^ Skalli, Loubna H. (2006). Through a Local Prism: Gender, Globalization, and Identity in Moroccan Women's Magazines, 70. 
  6. ^ Moroccan Embassy in Seoul, South Korea (2007). Kid of Alien Dad May Get Moroccan Nationality (HTML). The Seoul Times. Retrieved on 2007-09-07, 2007.
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