Fostering Ethics: Islam, Adoption and the Care of Children
Thu 25 June 2020
ONLINE
Muslim beliefs and practices with regard to the adoption of children and foster care is currently a subject of increasing attention. Besides various circumstances that can leave many Muslim children in the care of social services, the urgent needs of unaccompanied minors coming to the UK and Europe from war-torn countries have highlighted particular challenges. Meanwhile, legal issues related to the definition of adoption and its Islamic alternative (kafala) remain a longstanding problem, often resulting in families divided across borders. Responding to such concerns, Muslim community leaders and organizations are taking an interest in formulating revised Islamic guidelines on adoption and foster care.
These efforts coincide with a recent growth of scholarship in Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies on childhood and the family. Research in Islamic family law has investigated the complexities of child custody and precursors to the notion of ‘best interests of the child’. Historians have documented various forms of fictive kinship in Muslim societies of the past, and the modern development of institutionalized care of orphans. Sociologists and anthropologists have likewise challenged simplistic assumptions about religious norms: while the shari`a is understood to prohibit adoption, it often coexists with an array of culturally legitimized practices (such as the custom of secret adoptions in Morocco). Critical insights from related research in other fields also invite comparison, including British social history before adoption came to be legalized less than 100 years ago in 1926, as well as the factors behind the more recent emergence of so-called ‘open adoption’.
Cost: FREE
Enquiries and booking
Booking is recommended for this event.
Enquiries: Nicki Dawidowski Website Email: conferences@crassh.cam.ac.uk
Timing
Venue
Address: | ONLINE Alison Richard Building, 7 West Road, Cambridge Cambs CB3 9DT |