Minimum Marriage Age Legislation in Yemen, 2008-2014: Exploring Some Limits to Portability of the ACF

Rasha Jarhum*, Robert Hoppe

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterAcademicpeer-review

    2 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Examining the portability of the Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF) for understanding public policymaking in incomplete states characterized by competitive autocracy and deep poverty, this paper tells the story of struggles around setting rules for a minimum age for (womens’) marriage in Yemen. It shows how the ‘unification’ of North and South Yemen entailed a legal harmonization process that rolled back South’s women emancipation policies that stipulated a woman’s consent to marry and prohibited early marriage (=18 years), and reintroduced Islamist policies, defending informal patriarchal family traditions that enabled child marriages (=15 years) under male guardianship. Yet, surprisingly, the Yemenite variety of the Arab Uprisings of 2011 led to an externally brokered two-year transition period (March, 2013-January, 2014) in which a ʼnational dialogue’ opened new venues and a window of opportunity for women civil society organizations to influence decision-making on a new constitution. The ‘devil shift’, unproductive debate between the pro- and anti-early marriage advocacy coalitions was, for a brief period, de-escalated and reframed in a new, piously modern Islamic ‘post-Islamist’ discourse expressive of both Islamic and womens’ rights positions; and appeared to result in a shared, enlightened, yet Shariah-compatible stance for a flexible 18-year minimum age standard. The opportunity to anchor this compromise in the new constitution was lost, however, when Yemen politics spiralled (back) increasingly into civil and proxy warfare. This history of failed policy change clarifies the possibilities, but also some serious limitations of the ACF as implicitly based on a western, liberal-democratic assumption of ‘politics as struggle over policy between adversaries’, instead of ‘politics as struggle of power and identities between enemies’.

    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationWomen, Civil Society and Policy Change in the Arab World
    PublisherSpringer
    Pages111-145
    Number of pages35
    ISBN (Electronic)9783030020897
    ISBN (Print)9783030020880
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2019

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