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20 UCLA J. Islamic & Near E. L. 107 (2023)
Unwilling Co-Wives and the Law of Polygamy in Pakistan

handle is hein.journals/ucjicneal20 and id is 112 raw text is: 




    UNWILLING CO-WIVES AND THE LAW OF
                 POLYGAMY IN PAKISTAN


                         Iqra   Saleem Khan


                           ABOUT   THE AUTHOR
     The  author is an S.J.D. candidate at Harvard Law School. Her doctoral
research focuses on the role of religion/secularism in the divergent judicial inter-
pretation of Muslim Family  Laws in Pakistan and Bangladesh, with a special
focus on the status of Ahmadiyya Muslim women. She previously taught Islamic
Law  at the Institute of Legal Studies.

                                ABSTRACT
     This paper is a legal realist endeavor that seeks to uncover a thorough and
exhaustive description of Polygamy Law in Pakistan before moving on to a pre-
scriptive analysis. Having an understanding of the stakes involved, background
rules at play and the inadequacies within the law can be immensely useful in
identifying the harm and redressing it. Thus, in first separating the Is from the
Ought, Part I describes Pakistani polygamy Law and the limited legal reme-
dies available to unwilling cowives. In Part II, the background rules driving the
bargain amongst the parties' to enter (or leave) polygamous marriages is discussed.
Thereafter in Part III, a distributive analysis is conducted using ideal-types to
uncover polygamy's dual nature as a security or a threat for all the parties impacted
by the law. Here I rely on the idea that marital partners bargain in the shadow of
the law with bargaining endowments created in part by the legal rules. By com-
paring four typical but contrasting marriages and examining the rules about the
formation and breakup of polygamous marriages, the role of the pre-existing and
new wife's consent (or not) and the economic consequences of poly-formation in
ongoing and divorcing marriages, I demonstrate that the surpluses generated and
distributions currently in place can both benefit and harm the cowives. Finally,
Part IV will prescribe a restorative justice approach to the situation of unwilling
cowives, arguing that the solution ought to be focused on redressing the social,
emotional and economic  harm caused to unwilling cowives than simply punish-
ing the perpetrator. Monetary restoration, victim-focused circles, and involvement
of the wider community are proposed as alternatives to punishment. My goal with
this project is to provide a nuanced and theoretically informed understanding of a
topic over which much ink has already been spilled. By using analytical techniques
from the legal realist toolkit, I seek to recast the case of polygamy in Pakistan as
more than just a ban it or allow it issue.
    © 2023 Iqra Saleem Khan
                                    107

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