Legislation and legitimation in Oman: the Basic Law

Type de ressource
Auteur/contributeur
Titre
Legislation and legitimation in Oman: the Basic Law
Résumé
When Sultan Qabus issued Decree 101 on November 6, 1996, Oman was the last Arab country to implement a constitutional document. However, the political impact of this document is controversial: Whereas some consider the Basic Law a step towards democratization, others see merely a continuation of traditional policies. In this article I investigate the innovative potential of the Basic Law. Against the background of Omani and regional history and European and Islamic constitutional thought, I review the Decree with regard to authority and legitimation. I suggest that the law is mainly symbolic in character. It exploits tribal and Islamic concepts to create a historically unfounded notion of a homogeneous state. The civil liberties it grants do not extend to the public sphere. I conclude that Oman's Basic Law does nothing more than to freeze the status quo, according to which the Sultan remains the only recognized authority in the state.
Publication
Islamic Law and Society
Maison d’édition
Brill
Lieu
Leiden
Date
2000
Volume
7
Numéro
3
Pages
359-397
Clé de citation
siegfriedLegislationLegitimationOman2000
Consulté le
03/11/2020 16:53
ISSN
0928-9380, 1568-5195
Langue
eng
Référence
Siegfried, N. (2000). Legislation and legitimation in Oman: the Basic Law. Islamic Law and Society, 7(3), 359‑397. https://doi.org/10.1163/156851900507689