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Religious change, social conflict and legal competition: the emergence of Christian personal law in colonial India
Authors
Agnes
Agnes
+49 more
Aiyar
Anderson
Anderson
Athavale
Baker
Baker
Balsara
Banerjea
Banerjee
Bateman
Bayly
Bengalee
Benton
Bezonji
Bhargava
Bonfield
Buettner
Chandra
Das
Dayal
Derrett
Fawcett
Firminger
Fyzee
Galanter
Ghose
Ghosha
Griffith
Helmholz
Ilbert
Jackson
Jain
Mallampalli
Maneck
Marshall
Metcalf
Moon
Mukerji
NANDINI CHATTERJEE
O'Sullivan
Rankin
Rattigan
Sarkar
Singha
Sinha
Stokes
Studdert-Kennedy
Viswanathan
Viswanathan
Publication date
28 May 2014
Publisher
'Cambridge University Press (CUP)'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2010One of the most contentious political issues in postcolonial India is the unfulfilled project of a ‘uniform civil code’ which would override the existing ‘personal laws’ or religion-based laws of domestic relations, inheritance and religious institutions. If the personal laws are admitted to be preserved (if somewhat distorted) remnants of ‘religious laws’, then the legitimacy of state intervention is called into question, especially since the Indian state claims to be secular. This paper, by discussing the history of the lesser-known Christian personal law, demonstrates that this conundrum is of considerable heritage. From the earliest days of British imperial rule in India, the quest to establish a universal body of law conflicted with other legal principles which upheld difference: that of religion, as well as race. It was the historical role of Indian Christians to occasion legal dilemmas regarding the jurisdictions of British and ‘native’ law, and concurrently about the identity of people subject to those different laws. In trying to discover who the Indian Christians were, and what laws ought to apply to them, British judges had perforce to reflect on who the ‘British’ were, whilst also dealing with conflicting collective claims made by Hindus, Muslims, Parsis, and Christians themselves about their own identity and religious rights. The Indian Christian personal law was an unintended by-product of this process, a finding which throws light both on the dynamics of colonial legislation, and on the essentially modern nature of Indian personal laws
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Last time updated on 02/01/2020
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Open Research Exeter
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Last time updated on 31/05/2014