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Bibliography
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE ................................................................................................................................... 2
Islamic Perspectives on Domestic Violence ......................................................................................... 2
North America ................................................................................................................................................ 2
Muslim Resources...................................................................................................................................... 2
Ethnic Resources ........................................................................................................................................ 4
General Resources ..................................................................................................................................... 6
International .................................................................................................................................................... 6
General Resources ..................................................................................................................................... 6
Country Resources .................................................................................................................................... 7
ISLAM & MUSLIMS ......................................................................................................................................... 10
Family Issues .................................................................................................................................................. 10
General ............................................................................................................................................................. 10
Gender Issues ................................................................................................................................................. 10
1
Peaceful Families Project, www.peacefulfamilies.org
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
Islamic Perspectives on Domestic Violence
Al-Hibri, Azizah, Y. (2003). An Islamic perspective on domestic violence. Fordham International Law
Journal, 27, 195-224.
Alwani, Zainab. (2007). The Qur’anic model for harmony in family relations. In Change from Within:
Diverse Perspectives on Domestic Violence in Muslim Communities, eds. Maha B. Alkhateeb and
Salma Elkadi Abugideiri, 33-66. Great Falls, VA: Peaceful Families Project.
Alwani, Zainab, and Abugideiri, Salma. (2003). What Islam Says About Domestic Violence. Herndon,
VA: Foundation for Appropriate and Immediate Temporary Help.
Mazhar, Uzma. Domestic Violence: Islamic Perspective. Retrieved October 11, 2005, from
http://www.crescentlife.com/psychissues/domestic_violence_islamic_perspective.htm
Mazhar, Uzma. Rape and Incest: Islamic Perspective. Retrieved October 11, 2005, from
http://www.crescentlife.com/articles/islamic%20psych/rape_and_incest_islamic_perspective.htm
Mubarak, Hadia. (2004). Breaking the Interpretive Monopoly: A Re-examination of Verse 4:34. Hawwa
2(3), 261-289.
Rahim, Habibeh. (2000). Virtue, gender and the family: Reflections on religious texts in Islam and
Hinduism. Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless, 9, 187-199.
North America
Muslim Resources
Abdullah, Keilani. (2007). A peaceful ideal, violent realities: A study on Muslim female domestic
violence survivors. In Change from Within: Diverse Perspectives on Domestic Violence in
Muslim Communities, eds. Maha B. Alkhateeb and Salma Elkadi Abugideiri, 69-89. Great Falls,
VA: Peaceful Families Project.
Abugideiri, Salma Elkadi (2007). Domestic violence among Muslims seeking mental health counseling.
In Change from Within: Diverse Perspectives on Domestic Violence in Muslim Communities, eds.
Maha B. Alkhateeb and Salma Elkadi Abugideiri, 91-116. Great Falls, VA: Peaceful Families
Project.
2
Peaceful Families Project, www.peacefulfamilies.org
Abugideiri, Salma. (2005). Working with Muslim women: Understanding religious and cultural issues. In
Walking Together: Working with Women from Diverse Religious and Spiritual Traditions, ed.
Jean Anton, 173-92. Seattle, WA: FaithTrust Institute.
Abugideiri, Salma. A perspective on domestic violence in the Muslim community. Retrieved October 11,
2005, from
http://www.faithtrustinstitute.org/downloads/article_from_salma__final_with_copyright_notice_f
or_web.pdf
Ali, Alisha, and Toner, Brenda B. (2001). Self-esteem as a predictor of attitudes toward wife abuse
among Muslim women and men in Canada. Journal of Social Psychology, 141, 23-30.
Alkhateeb, Maha, B., and Abugideiri, Salma Elkadi (Eds). (2007). Change from Within: Diverse
Perspectives on Domestic Violence in Muslim Communities. Great Falls, VA: Peaceful Families
Project.
Alkhateeb, Sharifa. (2002). Who has the right to save Muslim women from abuse? Journal of Religion
and Abuse, 4, 17-20.
Alkhateeb, Sharifa. (1999). Ending domestic violence in Muslim families. Journal of Religion and Abuse,
1, 49-59.
Alkhateeb, Sharifa., Ellis, Sharon, and Fortune, Marie. (2003). Domestic violence: The responses of
Christian and Muslim communities. Journal of Religion and Abuse, 2, 3-24.
Alwani, Zainab and Abugideiri, Salma. (2003). What Islam Says About Domestic Violence: A Guide for
Helping Muslim Families. Herndon, VA: FAITH (Foundation for Appropriate and Immediate
Temporary Help).
Ayyub, Ruksanna. (2000). Domestic violence in the South Asian Muslim immigrant population in the
United States. Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless, 9, 237-248.
FaithTrust Institute (Producer). (2007). Garments for One Another: Ending Domestic Violence in Muslim
Families [Documentary].
Faizi, Nooria. (2001). Domestic violence in the Muslim community. Texas Journal of Women and the
Law, 10, 209-230.
Funches, Maryam. (2007). A preliminary model for providing a domestic violence program in the Muslim
community. In Change from Within: Diverse Perspectives on Domestic Violence in Muslim
Communities, eds. Maha B. Alkhateeb and Salma Elkadi Abugideiri, 235-245. Great Falls, VA:
Peaceful Families Project.
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Peaceful Families Project, www.peacefulfamilies.org
Hassouneh-Phillips, Dena. (2003). Strength and vulnerability: Spirituality in abused American Muslim
women's lives. Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 24, 681-694.
Hassouneh-Phillips, Dena. (2001). American Muslim women's experiences of leaving abusive
relationships. Health Care for Women International, 22, 415-432.
Hassouneh-Phillips, Dena. (2001). Marriage is half of faith and the rest is fear of Allah": Marriage and
spousal abuse among American Muslims. Violence Against Women, 7, 927-946.
Hassouneh-Phillips, Dena. (2001). Polygamy and wife abuse: A qualitative study of Muslim women in
America. Health Care for Women International, 22, 735-748.
Hendricks, Seraj. Authority and the Abuse of Power in Muslim Marriages. Retrieved October 11, 2005,
from http://www.zawaj.com/articles/marriage_abuse_power.html
Magid, Mohamed. (2007). Affecting change as an imam. In Change from Within: Diverse Perspectives on
Domestic Violence in Muslim Communities, eds. Maha B. Alkhateeb and Salma Elkadi
Abugideiri, 187-202. Great Falls, VA: Peaceful Families Project.
Memon, Kamran. (1997). Wife abuse in the Muslim community. Islamic Horizons.
Siddiqui, Shahina. (2005). Helping Victims of Domestic Violence. Tempe, AZ: Islamic Social Services
Association.
Soundvision. Twelve Tips for Imams in the West for Dealing with Domestic Violence. Retrieved October
11, 2005, from http://www.zawaj.com/articles.html#violence.
Ethnic Resources
Abraham, Margaret. (1999). Sexual abuse in South Asian immigrant marriages. Violence Against
Women, 5/6, pp. 591-618.
Abraham, Margaret. (1998). Speaking the unspeakable: Marital violence against South Asian immigrant
women in the United States. Indian Journal of Gender Studies, 5, 215-241.
Abu-Ras, Wahiba M. (2007). Cultural beliefs and service utilization by battered Arab immigrant women.
Violence Against Women, 13(10), 1002-1028.
Abu-Ras, Wahiba M. (2003). Barriers to services for Arab immigrant battered women in a Detroit suburb.
Journal of Social Work Research and Evaluation, 4, 49-66.
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Peaceful Families Project, www.peacefulfamilies.org
Adam, Najma. (2000). Domestic Violence Against Women Within Immigrant Indian and Pakistani
Communities in the United States. [unpublished doctoral dissertation] Chicago, IL: University of
Illinois.
Ahmad, Farah, Riaz, Sarah, Barata, Paula, and Stewart, Donna. (2004). Patriarchal beliefs and
perceptions of abuse among South Asian immigrant women. Violence Against Women, 10(3),
262-282.
Ammar, Nawal, H. (2000). Simplistic stereotyping and complex reality of Arab-American immigrant
identity: Consequences and future strategies in policing wife battery. Islam & Christian Muslim
Relations, 11(1), 51-70.
Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence/APIA Health Forum. (2006). Lifetime Spiral of
Gender Violence in Farsi and English. http://www.apiahf.org/apidvinstitute/PDF/FarsiPersian_Lifetime_Spiral.pdf.
Das Dasgupta, Shamita and Warrier, Sujata. (1997). In(visible) Terms: Domestic Violence in the Asian
Indian Context: A Handbook for Intervention. Union, NJ: Manavi.
Deluxe Productions. (1998). Behind Closed Doors: A Multicultural Documentary on Family Violence.
[Documentary, 24 minutes]
Justice Institute of BC. Facing Diversity: Responding to Violence against Women from Diverse Cultures
[Documentary, 46 minutes]
Kasvin, Nadia and Tashayeva, Angela. (2004). Community organizing to address domestic violence in
immigrant populations in the USA. Journal of Religion & Abuse, 6(3/4), 109-112.
Kulwicki, Anahid D. and Miller, June. (1999). Domestic violence in the Arab American population:
Transforming environmental conditions through community education. Issues in Mental Health
Nursing, 20, 199-215.
Merchant, Munira (2000). A comparative study of agencies assisting domestic violence victims: Does the
South Asian community have special needs? Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless, 9, 249259.
Nankani, Sandhya. (2000). Breaking the Silence – Domestic Violence in the South Asian-American
Community: An Anthology. Philadelphia, PA: Xlibris Corporation.
Raj, Anita, and Jay Silverman. (2002). Violence against immigrant women: The roles of culture, context
and legal immigrant status on intimate partner violence. Violence Against Women, 8(3), 367-398.
Razack, Sherene H. (2003). A violent culture or culturalised violence? Feminist narratives of sexual
violence against South Asian women. Studies in Practical Philosophy,3(1), 80-104.
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Peaceful Families Project, www.peacefulfamilies.org
Razack, Sherene H. (1995). Domestic violence as gender persecution: Policing the borders of nation, race
and gender. Canadian Journal of Women and the Law, 8(1), 45-88.
Rianon, Nahid J. and Shelton, A.J. (2003). Perception of spousal abuse expressed by married
Bangladeshi immigrant women in Houston, Texas, U.S.A. Journal of Immigrant Health, 5(1), 3744.
General Resources
American Bar Association. (1998). It’s Not O.K.: Let’s Talk About Domestic Violence: A Video for
Professionals Working with Children Who Experience Domestic Violence. [Video, 10 minutes]
Barnes, Brittany, M. (2001). Family violence knows no cultural boundaries. Journal of Family and
Consumer Sciences, 93, 11-14.
Canadian Learning Company. (2000). Hidden Victims: Children of Domestic Violence. [Documentary, 32
minutes]
Centre for Children and Families in the Justice System. (2007). Little Eyes, Little Ears: How Violence
Against a Mother Shapes Children As They Grow. By Alison Cunningham and Linda Baker.
[Video]
Engel, Beverly. (1992). The Emotionally Abused Woman Overcoming Destructive Patterns and
Reclaiming Yourself. New York, NY: Ballantine Books.
Kinetic Video. (2001). Intimate Partner Violence. [Video, 28 minutes]
Mullender, Audrey, Hague, Gill, Imam, Umme, F., Kelly, Liz, Malos, Ellen, and Regan, Linda. (2002).
Barriers of racism, ethnicity, and culture. In Children's Perspectives on Domestic Violence, eds.
Mullender, Audrey et al., 132-155. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
O'Neil, Mike, & Newbold, Charles. (1994). Boundary Power: How I Treat You, How I Let You Treat Me,
How I Treat Myself. Nashville, TN: Sonlight Publications.
International
General Resources
Awad, Abed and Popescu, Robert S. (2000). When custody disputes go global: Applying the Hague
Convention to determine jurisdiction. New Jersey Law Journal, 161(6), S-4.
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Peaceful Families Project, www.peacefulfamilies.org
Chantler, Khatidja. (2006). Independence, dependency and interdependence: struggles and resistances of
minoritized women within and on leaving violent relationships. Feminist Review: Everyday
Struggling, 82 (1), 27-49.
Kort, Alexis. (2005). Dar al-Cyber Islam: Women, domestic violence and the Islamic reformation on the
World Wide Web. Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 25(3), 363-383.
Country Resources
Abirafeh, Lina. (2007). Freedom is only won from the inside: Domestic violence in post-conflict
Afghanistan. In Change from Within: Diverse Perspectives on Domestic Violence in Muslim
Communities, eds. Maha B. Alkhateeb and Salma Elkadi Abugideiri, 117-132. Great Falls, VA:
Peaceful Families Project.
Ahmed, Awad M. (2007). Domestic violence in the Sudan: Opening Pandora’s box. In Change from
Within: Diverse Perspectives on Domestic Violence in Muslim Communities, eds. Maha B.
Alkhateeb and Salma Elkadi Abugideiri, 133-153. Great Falls, VA: Peaceful Families Project.
Ahmed, Awad M., and A.E. Elmardi. (2005). A study of domestic violence among women attending a
medical centre in Sudan. East Mediterranean Health Journal, 11(1/2), 164-74.
Almosaed, Nora. (2004). Violence against women: A cross-cultural perspective. Journal of Muslim
Minority Affairs, 24(1), 67-88.
Araji, Sharon K. and Carlson, John. (2001). Family violence including crimes of honor in Jordan.
Violence Against Women, 7(5), 586-621.
Arin, Canan. (2001). Femicide in the name of honor in Turkey. Violence Against Women, 7(7), 821-825.
Baral, Isin, Kora, Kaan, Yuksel, Sahika, and Ufuk Sezgin. (1998). Self-mutilating behavior of sexually
abused female adults in Turkey. Journal of Interpersonal Violence Beverly Hills, 13(4), 427-437.
Boonprasat-Lewis, Nantawan, and Fortune, Marie (Eds.) (1999). Remembering Conquest:
Feminist/Womanist Perspectives on Religion, Colonization, and Sexual Violence. Haworth Press.
Douki S, Nacef F, Belhadj A, Bouasker A, and R. Ghachem. (2003). Violence against women in Arab and
Islamic countries. Archives of Womens Mental Health, 6(3), 165-171.
Gill, Aisha. (2006). Patriarchal violence in the name of ‘honour’. International Journal of Criminal
Justice Sciences, 1(1), 1-12.
Gill, Aisha. (2004). ‘Voicing the silent fear: South Asian women’s experiences of domestic violence’.
Howard Journal of Criminal Justice, 43(5), 465-483.
Gill, Aisha, and Rehman, Gulshun. (2004). Empowerment through activism: responding to domestic
violence in the South Asian community. Gender and Development, 12(1), 75-82.
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Peaceful Families Project, www.peacefulfamilies.org
Haj-Yahia, M. (2002). Wife abuse and battering in the sociocultural context of Arab society. Family
Process, 39, 237-55.
Haj-Yahia, M. & Ben-Arieh, A. (2000). The incidence of Arab adolescents’ exposure to violence in their
families of origin and its sociodemographic correlates. Child Abuse and Neglect, 24(10), 12991315.
Hajjar, Lisa. (2004). Religion, state power, and domestic violence in Muslim societies: A framework for
comparative analysis. Law & Social Inquiry, 29(1), 1-38.
Kamal, Sarah. (2007). Development communications strategies and domestic violence in Afghanistan. In
Change from Within: Diverse Perspectives on Domestic Violence in Muslim Communities, eds.
Maha B. Alkhateeb and Salma Elkadi Abugideiri, 221-234. Great Falls, VA: Peaceful Families
Project.
Khan, Shahnaz. (2001). Gender, Religion, Sexuality and the State: Mediating the Hadood Laws in
Pakistan (Pamphlet). Centre for Research on Violence Against Women and Children Publication
Series. London, Ontario, Canada
Koenig, Michael, A., Ahmed, Safiuddin, Hossain, Mian B., and Mozumder, A.B. Khorshed Alam.
(2003). Women's status and domestic violence in rural Bangladesh: individual- and communitylevel effects. Demography,40(2),269-288.
Macey, Marie. (1999). Religion, male violence, and the control of women: Pakistani Muslim men in
Bradford, UK. Gender Development, 7(1), 48-55.
Macey, Marie. (1998). Class, gender and religious influences on changing patterns of Pakistani Muslim
male violence in Bradford. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 21(2).
Moghisi, Manijeh. Iranian Women and Family Abuse. Violence Intervention and Education Workgroup.
Quraishi, Asifa. (2000). Her Honor. In Windows of faith: Muslim women scholar-activists in North
America, ed. Gisella Webb, 102-135. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.
Razack, Sherene H. (2004). Imperiled Muslim women, dangerous Muslim men and civilised Europeans:
Legal and social responses to forced marriages. Feminist Legal Studies, 12(2), 129-174.
Refaat, Amany, Dandash, Khadiga F., El Defrawi, Mohammed H., and Eyada, Moustafa. (2001). Female
genital mutilation and domestic violence among Egyptian women. Journal of Sex and Marital
Therapy, 27(5), 593-598.
Salari, Zohra, and Nakhaee, Nouzar. (2008). Identifying types of domestic violence and its associated risk
factors in a pregnant population in Kerman hospitals, Iran Republic. Asia-Pacific Journal of
Public Health, 20(1), 49-55.
Sev’er, Aysan and Yurdakul, Gökçeçiçek. (2001). Culture of honor, culture of change: A feminist
analysis of honor killings in rural Turkey. Violence Against Women, 7(9), 964-998.
Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Nadera and Erez, Edna. (2003). Integrating a victim voice in community policing of
domestic violence: A feminist critique. International Review of Victimology, 9(2), 113-135.
Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Nadera. (2000). Blocking her exclusion: A contextually sensitive model of
intervention for handling female abuse. Social Service Review, 74(4), 620-634.
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Peaceful Families Project, www.peacefulfamilies.org
Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Nadera. (1999). Law, politics, and violence against women: The case-study of
Palestinian-Israelis. Law and Policy, 21(2), 189-211.
Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Nadera. (1999). The politics of disclosing female sexual abuse: A case-study of
Palestinian society. Child Abuse & Neglect, 23(12), 1275-1293.
Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Nadera. (1997). Wife abuse: A method of social control. Israel Social Science
Research, 12(1), 59-72.
Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Nadera. & Baker, Ahmad M. (1997). Wife abuse in Palestinian society: Social
phenomenon or social problem? Arab Studies Quarterly, 19(20), 41-55.
Sonbol, Amira E. (1996). Law and gender violence in Ottoman and modern Egypt. In Women, the family,
and divorce laws in Islamic history, ed. Amira El Azhary Sonbol, 277-89. Syracuse, NY:
Syracuse University Press.
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Peaceful Families Project, www.peacefulfamilies.org
ISLAM & MUSLIMS
Family Issues
Abusulayman, Abdulhamid. (2003). Marital Discord: Recapturing the Full Islamic Spirit of Human
Dignity. Herndon, VA: International Institute of Islamic Thought.
Alkhateeb, Sharifa. The Muslim marriage contract. Retrieved October 11, 2005, from
http://www.beliefnet.com/story/73/story_7375_1.html
Aswad, Barbara.C. and Bilge, Barbara (eds). (1996). Family and Gender Among American Muslims.
Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Awad, Abed. (2002). Court enforces mahr provision in Muslim marriage contract: Odatalla recognizes
the secular terms of a religious agreement. New Jersey Law Journal, 169(11), 28-31.
Syeed-Miller, Najeeba, and Quraishi, Asifa. (2004). No Altars: A Survey of Islamic family law in the
United States. In Women’s Rights and Islamic Family Law, ed. Lynn Welchman. London: Zed
Books.
Zeini, Marwa. (2007). A legal guide to marriage and divorce for the American Muslim woman. In
Change from Within: Diverse Perspectives on Domestic Violence in Muslim Communities, eds.
Maha B. Alkhateeb and Salma Elkadi Abugideiri, 203-220. Great Falls, VA: Peaceful Families
Project.
General
Al-Faruqi, Ismail R. and Al-Faruqi, Lois. (1986). The Cultural Atlas of Islam. New York, NY: Macmillan
Publishing Company.
Esposito, John L. (2002). What Everyone Needs to Know About Islam. New York, NY: Oxford University
Press.
Nimer, Muhammad. (2002). The North American Muslim Resource Guide: Muslim Community Life in the
United States and Canada. New York, NY: Routledge.
Gender Issues
Afsaruddin, Asma. (1999). Hermeneutics and Honor: Negotiating Female “Public” Space in Islamic/ate
Societies. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Middle East Monographs XXXII.
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Peaceful Families Project, www.peacefulfamilies.org
Ahmed, Leila. (1992). Women and gender in Islam: Historical roots of a modern debate. New Haven:
Yale University Press.
Al-Faruqi, Lois Lamya. (1988). Women, Muslim society and Islam. Indianapolis, IN: American Trust
Publications.
Al-Hibri, Azizah Y. (2000). An introduction to Muslim women’s rights. In Windows of Faith, ed.
Gisela Webb, 51-72. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.
Al-Hibri, Azizah Y. (1997). Islam, law and custom: Redefining Muslim women’s rights. American
University Journal of International Law and Policy, 12, 1-44.
Barlas, Asma. (2006). Women’s and feminist readings of the Qur’an. In Cambridge Companion to the
Qur’an, ed. by Jane McAuliffe. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Barlas, Asma. (2002). Believing Women in Islam: Unreading Patriarchal Interpretations of the Qur’an.
Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
Bullock, Katherine (ed.). (2005). Muslim Women Activists in North America: Speaking for Ourselves.
Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
Bullock, Katherine. (2003). Rethinking Muslim Women and the Veil: Challenging Historical and
Modern Stereotypes. Herndon, VA: International Institute of Islamic Thought.
Esposito, John. (1982). Women in Muslim Family Law. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.
Kahf, Mohja. (1999). Western Representation of the Muslim Woman: From Termagant to Odalisque.
Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
Khan, Shahnaz. (2000). Muslim Women: Crafting a North American identity. Gainesville, FL:
University Press of Florida.
Mills, Rabia. Women's rights in the Islamic prenuptial agreement: Use them or lose them. Retrieved
October 11, 2005, from http://muslim-canada.org/prenuptial.htm.
Roald, Anne S. (2001). Women in Islam: The Western Experience. London, U.K.: Routledge.
Wadud-Muhsin, Amina. (1992). Qur’an and Woman: Rereading the Sacred Text from a Woman’s
Perspective. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
Webb, Gisela (ed.). (2000). Windows of Faith: Muslim Women Scholar-Activists in North America.
Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.
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Peaceful Families Project, www.peacefulfamilies.org
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