Book

Women, property, and Islam: Palestinian experiences, 1920-1990

Cambridge University PressNew York • Published In 1995 • Pages: xi, 274

By: Moors, Annelies.

Abstract
This is an ethnographic study of women's property rights in the Jabal Nablus region of the West Bank. Moors looks at the varying practices surrounding inheritance, the dower, and wage labor; the three main ways women acquire property. She compares differences between rural and urban women, and women from different classes. She discusses the changes in these practices with the marginalization of agriculture and the commoditization of Palestinian society. She includes in her discussion the element of power which is not necessarily equated with property and explains why women would give up rights to property in some circumstances if instead power was gained.
Subjects
Real property
Inheritance
Occupational specialization
Labor supply and employment
Gender status
Mode of marriage
Aftermath of combat
culture
Palestinians
HRAF PubDate
2005
Region
Middle East
Sub Region
Middle East
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 2004
Field Date
1980-1989
Coverage Date
1920-1989
Coverage Place
Jabal Nablus region, West Bank, Occupied Territories, Israel
Notes
Annelies Moors
Includes bibliographical references (p. 261-268)
LCCN
94041373
LCSH
Palestinian Arabs