Bültmann & Gerriets
Law and Islamic Dress
Rights and Fascism in Europe
von Kimberley Brayson
Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic
Reihe: Human Rights Law in Perspectiv
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-1-5099-1049-6
Erscheint im April 2026
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 234 mm [H] x 156 mm [B] x 25 mm [T]
Gewicht: 454 Gramm
Umfang: 208 Seiten

Preis: 85,00 €
keine Versandkosten (Inland)


Der Verlag hat einen Erstverkauftag festgelegt. Jetzt bestellen und wir liefern zum 02.04.2026 aus.

Der Versand innerhalb der Stadt erfolgt in Regel am gleichen Tag.
Der Versand nach außerhalb dauert mit Post/DHL meistens 1-2 Tage.

85,00 €
merken
klimaneutral
Der Verlag produziert nach eigener Angabe noch nicht klimaneutral bzw. kompensiert die CO2-Emissionen aus der Produktion nicht. Daher übernehmen wir diese Kompensation durch finanzielle Förderung entsprechender Projekte. Mehr Details finden Sie in unserer Klimabilanz.
Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung

This book conceptualises European Court of Human Rights' judgments on Islamic dress as manifestations of the fascist impulse in modern human rights law. The author argues that human rights are thus not an antidote to fascism but are constituted through a fascist inflection and implicated in circulating fascism in the everyday. The inability of human rights to say 'no' to laws regulating and criminalising Islamic dress in Europe engenders an institutional Islamophobia in the law and Islamic dress debate in Europe.

The author interrogates the historical emergence of human rights, through a methodology of interdisciplinary, theoretical oscillations between feminism, decolonial, phenomenological and neo-Marxist thought to establish the rights/fascism dialectic. She argues that beyond exclusion and erasure the ownership of rights discourse enables the exploitation of racialised and gendered bodies for the maintenance of material and epistemological privilege with a white, Christian, male norm. It is this moment of ownership, where rights are both propertied and property, that constitutes the rights/fascism dialectic. The author goes on to argue that the rights/fascism dialectic operates at the heart of the Islamic dress debate in Europe to create the impossibility and instrumentalisation of Muslim women's bodies in European public space.

The book challenges shifting legal justifications by exposing the functioning of capital, colonialism, patriarchy and power at the European Court of Human Rights in key cases such as Sahin v Turkey and SAS v France. Theoretical insights of the rights/fascism dialectic are applied to the law and Islamic dress debate in the multicultural UK, assimilationist France and at the ECtHR. The conclusion is that the Islamic dress debate in Europe manifests the gender and racial differentiation and instrumentalisation that is essential to the maintenance of human rights and the modern, capitalist state in which rights are enmeshed.



Kimberley Brayson is Lecturer in Law and Director of Learning and Teaching at Leicester Law School. Prior to that, she was Senior Lecturer and Co-Director of the Sussex Centre for Gender Studies at the University of Sussex.

She completed her Ph.D at Queen Mary, University of London (2014) and has a bilingual masters in Legal Theory from the European Academy of Legal Theory, Brussels (magna cum laude) with a semester spent at the EUI, Florence (2006). She completed her undergraduate degree in English Law and German Law at the University of Kent with a year spent at the Phillips Universität, Marburg, Germany (2005).

She was an EU-funded Legal Researcher at the College of Europe, Bruges, (2007-2008) and held an EU-funded Research Fellowship, Juristras, (2008-2009) based at the University of Sussex.


weitere Titel der Reihe