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Hilal Elver offers an in-depth study of the controversy over the right of Muslim women to wear headscarves. Examining legal and political debates in Turkey, several European countries including France and Germany, and the United States, Elver shows the troubling exclusion of pious Muslim women from the public sphere in the name of secularism, democracy, liberalism, and women's rights.
List of contents
- I. Point of Departure
- Part 1: Turkey
- II. Nature of the Headscarf Controversy in Turkey: Popular Discourse
- III. Understanding a Complex History
- IV. The Role of the European Court of Human Rights
- Part 2: Europe and the United States
- V. Anti-Islamic Discourses in the West
- VI. France
- VII Germany
- VIII. The United States
- IX. Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
About the author
Hilal Elver is a research professor at the University of California Santa Barbara, where she has been Distinguished Visiting Professor since January, 2002. Previously she was the UNEP Chair on Environmental Diplomacy at the Mediterranean Academy of Diplomatic Studies in Malta, and taught at the University of Ankara, Faculty of Law, where she received her law degree and Ph.D. She also has an SJD from UCLA Law School. Her publications focus on international environmental law and human rights, specifically in relation to women's rights.
Summary
Hilal Elver offers an in-depth study of the escalating controversy over the right of Muslim women to wear headscarves. Examining legal and political debates in Turkey, several European countries including France and Germany, and the United States, Elver shows the troubling exclusion of pious Muslim women from the public sphere in the name of secularism, democracy, liberalism, and women's rights.
After evaluating political actions and court decisions from the national level of individual governments to the international sphere of the European Court of Human Rights, Elver concludes that judges and legislators are increasingly influenced by social pressures concerning immigration and multiculturalism, and by issues such as Islamophobia, the "war on terror, " and security concerns. She shows how these influences have resulted in a failure on the part of many Western governments to recognize and protect essential individual freedoms.
Employing a critical legal theory perspective to the headscarf controversy, Elver argues that law can be used to change underlying social conditions shaping the role of religion, and also the position of women in modern society. The Headscarf Controversy demonstrates how changes in law across nations can be used to restore state commitments to human rights.
Additional text
Hilal Elver ... is passionate about the issues, but writes without becoming emotional or overtly polemical. Her introduction is excellent, outlining the problems of the headscarf as they relate to secularism, human rights, racialization of Islam and Islamophobia, gender discrimination and the legal front. ... This book is thorough and comprehensive. The author excels is expressing clearly the multiple and compex issues arising from the headscarf controversy.