Available Formats
Queer and Religious Alliances in Family Law Politics and Beyond
By (Author) Nausica Palazzo
Edited by Jeffrey A. Redding
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
7th May 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
LGBTQ+ Studies / topics
Religion and politics
346.015
Paperback
230
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 18mm
454g
Family law is a site of social conflict and the erasure of non-traditional families. This book explores how conservative religious and progressive queer groups can cooperatively work together to expand family laws recognition beyond the traditional state-sponsored family. Various religious groups have shown an interest in promoting alternative family structures. For example, certain Muslim and Mormon communities have advocated for polygamy, thereby aligning with queer groups interest in overcoming the engrafting of monogamy into state law. Advocacy by North American religious conservatives for reforms in favor of non-conjugal families and against same-sex marriage overlaps with certain queer efforts to legitimize friendships and non-traditional families more generally.
This book explores these potential areas of queer and religious political cooperationincluding limitations and principled reservations to such cooperation. It then looks at additional future arenas of queer and religious political cooperation going beyond family law.
"Insightful, provocative, and cutting-edge, Palazzo and Reddings book brings a novel perspective to an area that suffers academic stagnation: the politics of the recognition of diverse family structures. The premise of the bookthose religious activists and queer advocates, though strange bedfellows, might be allies in promoting a more pluralistic conception of relationshipsopens up unexpected and unexplored intellectual avenues. Written by a group of worldwide leading thinkers in diverse disciplines, the chapters offer a nuanced and sober account of the possibilities and the boundaries of a queer-religious alliance. A bold intervention, this book should be useful to anyone with an interest in queer politics, relationship recognition, and religious perspectives in law." Erez Aloni, Associate Professor, Peter A. Allard School of Law, University of British Columbia, Canada.
This volume makes useful and original contributions to several fields, addressing relatively new and emerging areas. A key strength is its openness to the varying potential for alliances between religious groups and queer ones, giving us conceptual tools for dealing with this diversity on the ground. Robert Leckey, Dean, Professor, and Samuel Gale Chair, Faculty of Law, McGill University,Canada.
This thought-provoking volume offers a thorough triangulation, from queer and religious perspectives, of the role of the state, civic organizations, and individuals in norming nonnormative families. Following a rich introduction, the contributors each convincingly demonstrate how queer and religious groups, as unlikely companions, can advance family law and broader constitutional debate toward much-needed legal pluralism.Frederik Swennen, Dean and Professor of Family Law and Kinship Studies, University of Antwerp,Belgium.
Nausica Palazzo is an Assistant Professor at NOVA School of Law, Lisbon.
Jeffrey A. Redding is a Senior Fellow at Melbourne Law School and the author of A Secular Need: Islamic Law and State Governance in Contemporary India.