• Produktbild: Parental Child Abduction to Islamic Law Countries
  • Produktbild: Parental Child Abduction to Islamic Law Countries

Parental Child Abduction to Islamic Law Countries A Child Rights Analysis of the Legal Framework

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

01.10.2022

Herausgeber

Paul Beaumont

Verlag

Hart Publishing

Seitenzahl

250

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,1/1,8 cm

Gewicht

543 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-5099-3911-4

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

01.10.2022

Herausgeber

Paul Beaumont

Verlag

Hart Publishing

Seitenzahl

250

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,1/1,8 cm

Gewicht

543 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-5099-3911-4

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Parental Child Abduction to Islamic Law Countries
  • Produktbild: Parental Child Abduction to Islamic Law Countries
  • 1. Introduction
    I. Islamic Law Countries as a Focus
    II. The Abducted Child as a Focus
    III. A Children's Rights-Based Approach
    IV. Methodological Approach
    Dataset
    Diversity of Islamic Law Countries
    The Limitations of this Methodology
    V. The Parameters and Overview of this Text
    2. The Importance of Children's Rights to the Regulation of Parental Child Abduction
    I. A Children's Rights-Based Approach Requires the Hague Convention to be Interpreted as a Children's Rights Instrument
    II. Embedding Children's Rights to Correctly Apply the Hague Convention
    III. Morocco: A Case Study
    IV. Conclusion
    3. In the Best Interests of the Abducted Child
    I. Introducing Samir, Yasmin, Jamal and Daniel
    II. The Principle of the Best Interests of the Child and the Law on Cross-Border Parental Abduction
    III. How the Domestic Islamic Law Framework Responds to Cases of Parental Child Abduction from the UK
    IV. How the Hague Regime Fares as an Alternative to Upholding the Article 3 CRC Right of Children Abducted
    to Islamic Law Countries
    V. Best Interests of the Child as a Rule of the Procedure
    VI. Conclusion
    4. The Child's Voice in Abduction Proceedings
    I. An Abducted Child's Right to be Heard: Article 12 CRC
    II. A Child's Right to Autonomy in Decision-Making: Islamic Court Proceedings
    III. A Child's Right to Participate: Hague Proceedings
    IV. Conclusion
    5. The Abducted Child's Right to Non-Discrimination
    I. The Legal Framework on Non-Discrimination
    II. Gender Discrimination, Islamic Law and the Abducted Child: A Conceptual and Contextual Analysis
    III. The Challenge of Gender Discrimination in Cases of Parental Abduction
    IV. Solutions to Gender Discrimination in Parental Child Abduction Law
    V. How Will the Hague Convention Respond to the Cases of Miriam, Ryan and Aliyah?
    VI. Conclusion
    6. Conclusion
    I. Does the Legislation Responding to Parental Abduction Uphold Children's Rights?
    II. Does the Legislation Grant the Judiciary Discretion to Interpret Parental Abduction Law in a Manner Consistent With Children's Rights?
    III. What Developments in the Law are Needed to Centralise the Rights of the Child in a Parental Abduction Context?
    IV. Future Implications of the Research: Child Abduction Law as a Living Instrument