BibliographyControl <strong>and</strong> Sexuality: The Revival of Zina Laws in Muslim ContextsAmnesty International (2010), ‘As If Hell Fell On Me’: The Human Rights Crisis in NorthwestPakistan. London: Amnesty International Publications.Cheema, Moeen H. <strong>and</strong> Abdul-Rahman Mustafa (2008–9), ‘From the Hudood Ordinances tothe Protection of Women Act: Islamic Critiques of the Hudood Laws of Pakistan’, UCLAJournal of Islamic <strong>and</strong> Near Eastern Law 1(1).Cheema, Moeen H. (2006), ‘Cases <strong>and</strong> Controversies: Pregnancy as Proof of Guilt UnderPakistan’s Hudood Laws’, Brooklyn Journal of International Law 32: 121.Cohen, Stephen P. (2004), The Idea of Pakistan. Washington DC: Brookings Institution.Cook, Nancy (2007), Gender, Identity, <strong>and</strong> Imperialism: Women Development Workers in Pakistan.New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Ghazali, Abdus Sattar (1996), Islamic Pakistan: Illusions <strong>and</strong> Reality. Islamabad: National BookClub.Iqbal, Afzal (1986), Islamisation of Pakistan. Lahore: Vanguard Books.Jones-Pauly, Chris (2000), ‘Use of the Qur’ān in Key Pakistani Court Decisions on zinā’ <strong>and</strong> qadf ’,Arabica 47 (3): 539.Khan, Shahnaz (2003), ‘“Zina” <strong>and</strong> the Moral Regulation of Pakistani Women’, Feminist Review 75: 75.(2004), ‘Locating the Feminist Voice: The Debate on the Zina Ordinance’, FeministStudies 30 (3): 660.(2007), Zina, Transnational Feminism, <strong>and</strong> the Moral Regulation of Pakistani Women.Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.Lau, Martin (2010), ‘Sharia <strong>and</strong> National Law in Pakistan’ in Jan Michiel Otto (ed.), ShariaIncorporated: A Comparative Overview of the Legal Systems of Twelve Muslim Countries inPast <strong>and</strong> Present, 373–432. Leiden: Leiden University Press.Malik, Iftikhar H. (2008), The History of Pakistan. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.Maudoodi, Sayyid Abul A’la (1967), Purdah <strong>and</strong> the Status of Women in Islam. Lahore: IslamicPublications Ltd.Menski, Werner F. (1997), ‘South Asian Muslim Law Today: An Overview’, Sharqiyyat 9 (1): 16.Mullally, Siobhán (2006), Gender, Culture <strong>and</strong> Human Rights: Reclaiming Universalism. Oxford:Hart Publishing.National Commission on the Status of Women (2003), Report <strong>and</strong> Recommendations on 1979Hudood Ordinances. Islamabad: National Commission on the Status of Women.Pal, Izzud-Din (1990), ‘Women <strong>and</strong> Islam in Pakistan’, Middle Eastern Studies 26 (4): 449.Rouse, Shahnaz (1988), ‘Women’s Movement in Pakistan: State, Class, Gender’, Women LivingUnder Muslim Laws Dossier 3, http://www.wluml.org/node/241178
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Ziba Mir-Hosseini and Vanja Hamzić
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ContentsvviiAcknowledgementsGlossar
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GlossaryAcross Muslim countries and
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GlossaryDarul Islam: ‘Abode of Is
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GlossaryIjab & Qabul: Lit. ‘offer
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Lawat/Liwat: Penetrative sex betwee
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Control and Sexuality: The Revival
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Introduction
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Control and Sexuality: The Revival
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Introductionbe sought both in ‘tr
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Control and Sexuality: The Revival
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Criminalising Sexuality: Zina Laws
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Criminalising Sexuality: Zina Laws
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IndonesiaCountry ProfileThe Republi
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Indonesiaon employing religion in t
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Indonesiamovement, however, unified
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IndonesiaAct also strengthened the
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IndonesiaCases of Human Rights Viol
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Indonesia2008 Law on PornographySin
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Indonesiathat “community [moral]
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Indonesiajustified as a pre-emptive
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Indonesiato leave their village and
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Indonesia(1) the right to an object
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Indonesiahas been difficult; Indone
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Indonesiaparticularly those of the
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IndonesiaIndonesian civil society,
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IndonesiaGeertz, Clifford (1971) [1
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IndonesiaVan Klinken, Gerry (2007),
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IranCountry Profile 1Iran is one of
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Iranpresident Khatami in 1997. Desp
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Iranwere retained only in the new C
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IranThe success of the Revolution w
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Iranelected bodies, which came to b
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IranMore importantly, it enables th
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IranThe clerics who took power afte
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Iranwoman who are forbidden (haram)
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IranThe notion of “his own knowle
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Iranconvicted women have already at
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Iranwhich, despite severe repressio
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Iranamended so as to curtail men’
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Irangovernment. Despite the silenci
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Iran- and in a few cases has obtain
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IranMovement, under the joint - but
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IranBibliographyAfary, Janet (2009)
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Iran(2009), ‘Iran’, in Sanja Ke
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NigeriaCountry ProfileThe Federal R
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Nigeriaand international advocacy,
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Nigerianorthern provinces, allows f
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Nigeria‘Settlement’ and Dynamic
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- Page 169 and 170: NigeriaBibliographyAbdullah, Hussai
- Page 171 and 172: NigeriaJohnson-Odim, Cheryl and Nin
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- Page 177 and 178: PakistanCountry ProfileThe Islamic
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- Page 229 and 230: Turkeyfrom the previous ones, as th
- Page 231 and 232: TurkeyThe history of Turkey, includ
- Page 233 and 234: TurkeyHirsch, Ernst (1968), ‘Vier
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IndexAAbbasgholizadeh, Mahboubeh 97
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Indexequality 3, 25, 36, 37, 51, 83
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IndexMinistry of Justice (Iran) 87,
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IndexWomen in Nigeria (WIN) 142Wome