Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Property, Authority and Personal Law: Waqf In Colonial South Asia
View through CrossRef
British rule in South Asia transformed the economy and society of the subcontinent, in large part by revamping the status of landed property. Colonial law was founded on the notion that ostensibly religious personal law was outside state jurisdiction. The boundary between state law and personal law, however, was blurry and some elements of ‘religious’ law had major implications for matters at the core of colonial policy, such as property control. This ambivalence produced a scenario in which legal debates became authorised spaces for colonial subjects to pursue their agendas. Taking the Muslim charitable trust, or waqf, in late colonial British India, this article argues that advocacy of substantive and procedural changes in waqf laws by Muslim legal activists repre-sented a pointed critique of colonial policies. Through a brief history of the articulation between charitable trusts and colonial property policies, the article draws from the work of two late colo-nial Muslim judges, Syed Ameer Ali and Faiz Badrudin Tyabji, to demonstrate the role waqf debates played in refashioning colonial legal culture. It is suggested that claims about waqf were both instrumental attempts to advance claims to property, and instances for articulating broader ideological critiques of the interpretative authority of British judges.
Title: Property, Authority and Personal Law: Waqf In Colonial South Asia
Description:
British rule in South Asia transformed the economy and society of the subcontinent, in large part by revamping the status of landed property.
Colonial law was founded on the notion that ostensibly religious personal law was outside state jurisdiction.
The boundary between state law and personal law, however, was blurry and some elements of ‘religious’ law had major implications for matters at the core of colonial policy, such as property control.
This ambivalence produced a scenario in which legal debates became authorised spaces for colonial subjects to pursue their agendas.
Taking the Muslim charitable trust, or waqf, in late colonial British India, this article argues that advocacy of substantive and procedural changes in waqf laws by Muslim legal activists repre-sented a pointed critique of colonial policies.
Through a brief history of the articulation between charitable trusts and colonial property policies, the article draws from the work of two late colo-nial Muslim judges, Syed Ameer Ali and Faiz Badrudin Tyabji, to demonstrate the role waqf debates played in refashioning colonial legal culture.
It is suggested that claims about waqf were both instrumental attempts to advance claims to property, and instances for articulating broader ideological critiques of the interpretative authority of British judges.
Related Results
Law's Literature, Law's Body: The Aversion to Linguistic Ambiguity in Law and Literature
Law's Literature, Law's Body: The Aversion to Linguistic Ambiguity in Law and Literature
In any kind of literary analysis, the critic must grapple with linguistic ambiguity, and the law cannot help but operate in a linguistic realm as well. Neither of these claims is t...
Tropical Furniture and Bodily Comportment in Colonial Asia
Tropical Furniture and Bodily Comportment in Colonial Asia
This essay examines graphic, textual, and material evidence concerning the use of chairs by European colonists in South and Southeast Asia and by Japanese colonists in Taiwan. It f...
Comic Authority in Aristophanes’ Knights
Comic Authority in Aristophanes’ Knights
This article investigates the relationship between comic speech and political authority in democratic Athens through a reading of Aristophanes’ Knights. The article surveys three d...
Authority Through Freedom. On Freire’s Radicalisation of the Authority-Freedom Problem in Education
Authority Through Freedom. On Freire’s Radicalisation of the Authority-Freedom Problem in Education
Paulo Freire’s approach to the question of ‘authority and freedom’ in education and teaching (as well as in the political sphere), takes its cue from his early and radical approach...
Live Coding the Law: Improvisation, Code, and Copyright
Live Coding the Law: Improvisation, Code, and Copyright
This article concerns the emerging creative practice of live coding (i.e., the real-time programming of electronic music in text-based programming environments), and explores how t...
Big Boys And Little Boys: Justice And Law In Xenophon’s Cyropaedia and Memorabilia
Big Boys And Little Boys: Justice And Law In Xenophon’s Cyropaedia and Memorabilia
Xenophon’s anecdote concerning the exchange of clothes between a big boy and a little boy in Cyropaedia (1.3.16–18) offers a valuable framework for understanding his conception of ...
Urban Speculation, Economic Openness, and Market Experiments in Phnom Penh
Urban Speculation, Economic Openness, and Market Experiments in Phnom Penh
Foregrounding the interconnections that fuel speculation in Phnom Penh, this article examines experiments by developers and investors who not only seek to bring built projects to t...
Finding God’s Purpose: Hermann Cohen’s Use of Maimonides to Establish the Authority of Mosaic Law
Finding God’s Purpose: Hermann Cohen’s Use of Maimonides to Establish the Authority of Mosaic Law
AbstractThe most important Jewish source for Hermann Cohen’s rational theology of Judaism is Maimonides’ Guide of the Perplexed. Indeed, the Guide is of such importance that Cohen ...