The Rule of Law in the Middle East and the Islamic World Human Rights and the Judicial Process by Eugene Cotran and Mai Yamani, eds. I. B. (Tauris: London, 2000. 180 pages.)

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Mohammad Fadel

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Abstract

This work grew out of a series of lectures that were delivered over a
two-year period between 1996 and 1998 at the Centre of Islamic and
Middle Eastern Law (CIMEL) at the School of Oriental and African
Studies (SOAS), University of London, on the genera] subject of the rule of
law in the Middle East and Islamic countries. Subsequently, materials were
added dealing particularly with issues relating to human rights law. The
contributors to this work are a combination of legal academics, human rights activists, lawyers and judges, who hale from various countries in the
Arab world, Iran, the United States, Great Britain and Germany.
There are a total of fourteen separate chapters, of varying length and
quality. The book is not lengthy - including notes and authors’ biographies,
it is 180 pages long. The average length of each chapter is between ten and
fifteen pages. Despite the diversity of countries surveyed, all the essays are
concerned with generic questions regarding the rule of law, whether in a
theoretical sense, viz., whether the notion that legitimate governmental
action is limited to those acts that are deemed lawful by a pre-existing set
or rules, or in a practical sense, viz., assuming that the formal legal regime
of a given state recognizes the rule of law in a theoretical sense, whether
the coercive apparatus of the state in fact recognizes legal limitations on
its conduct.
Perhaps the most interesting (it is certainly the most lengthy, at 35 pages),
and most important, essay in this work is the very fiit one, authored by
Adel Omar Sherif, an Egyptian judge, wherein the author provides a digest
of the landmark decisions of the Egyptian Supreme Constitutional Court.
While the work can be criticized for taking on the appearance of a mere
survey of decisions, without taking a critical perspective to the Court’s
precedents, it is nonetheless a very valuable contribution for those lawyers
and scholars who cannot read Arabic but nonetheless wish to gain insight
into Egypt’s legal culture. The modest task of relating the decisions of
Egypt’s Supreme Constitutional Court is especially important given the
cliches regarding the absence of effective judicial institutions in the Arab
world. Sherifs contribution effectively dispels that myth. His article reveals
the Egyptian Supreme Constitutional Court to be a vibrant institution that
takes its constitutional duties seriously, and discharges those duties with
integrity, and when it finds that the government has acted unlawfully, it will
strike down the offensive legislation, or rule against the government ...

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