Equity in Jewish Law

Equity in Jewish Law
Author: Aaron Kirschenbaum
Publsiher: KTAV Publishing House, Inc.
Total Pages: 316
Release: 1991
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 088125326X

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Equity in Jewish Law

Equity in Jewish Law
Author: Aaron Kirschenbaum
Publsiher: KTAV Publishing House, Inc.
Total Pages: 430
Release: 1991
Genre: Religion
ISBN: UOM:39015025375570

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Selected Topics in Jewish Law law and equity in Jewish law

Selected Topics in Jewish Law  law and equity in Jewish law
Author: Hanina Ben-Menahem,Neil S. Hecht
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 135
Release: 1993
Genre: Jewish law
ISBN: 4214203569

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Gender Equality and Prayer in Jewish Law

Gender Equality and Prayer in Jewish Law
Author: Rabbi Ethan Tucker,Rabbi Micha'el Rosenberg
Publsiher: Ktav Publishing House
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2017
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 965524198X

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"As gender equality spreads throughout society, including its religiously observant sectors, traditional communities turn to their guiding sources to re-examine such questions. This book highlights the wealth of Jewish legal material surrounding gender and prayer, with particular focus on traditional services and the communal quorum, or minyan"--Provided by publisher"--

Judaism and Human Rights

Judaism and Human Rights
Author: Milton Ridvas Konvitz
Publsiher: Transaction Publishers
Total Pages: 440
Release: 2024
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1412827000

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Areligion or a culture like Judaism, at least three thousand years old, cannot be expected to be all of one piece, homogeneous, self-contained, consistent, a neatly constructed system of ideas. If Judaism were that, it would have died centuries ago and would be a subject of interest only to the historian and archaeologist. Judaism has been a living force precisely because it is a teeming, thundering, and clamoring phenomenon, full of contrary tendencies and inconsistencies. Although there are no words or phrases in Hebrew Scriptures for "human rights," "conscience," or "due process of law," the ideals and values which these concepts represent were inherent in the earliest Jewish texts. This volume begins with four essays on the concept of man's being born "free and equal," in the image of God. The underpinning of this concept in Jewish law is explored in Section 2, entitled "The Rule of Law." Section 3, "The Democratic Ideal," traces the foundations of democracy in the Jewish teachings in the Bible and the Talmud, which in turn influenced the whole body of Western political thought. Relations between man and man, man and woman, employer and employee, slave and master are all spelled out. Section 4 presents essays analyzing man's freedom of conscience, and his God-given rights to dissent and protest. Section 5 deals with aspects of personal liberty, including the right of privacy. Section 6, entitled "The Earth is the Lord's," deals with the Jewish view of man's transient tenancy on God's earth, his obligations not to destroy anything that lives or grows, and to share the earth's bounty with the poor, the widowed, and the orphaned. Section 7 delivers an analysis of the "end of days" vision of Micah and man's continuing need to strive for peace and not for war. The volume concludes with three new essays, dealing with contemporary issues: "In God's Image: The Religious Imperative of Equality under Law"; "The Values of a Jewish and Democratic State: The Task of Reaching a Synthesis"; and "Religious Freedom and Religious Coercion in the State of Israel." This enlarged edition is accessibly written for a general and scholarly audience and will be of particular interest to political scientists, historians, and constitutional scholars.

Jewish and Israeli Law An Introduction

Jewish and Israeli Law   An Introduction
Author: Shimon Shetreet,Walter Homolka
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 621
Release: 2017-05-08
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9783899497946

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This book provides a concise introduction to the basics of Jewish law. It gives a detailed analysis of contemporary public and private law in the State of Israel, as well as Israel’s legal culture, its system of government, and the roles of its democratic institutions: the executive, parliament, and judiciary. The book examines issues of Holocaust, law and religion, constitutionalization, and equality. It is the ultimate book for anyone interested in Israeli Law and its politics. Authors Shimon Shetreet is the Greenblatt Professor of Public and International Law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel. He is the President of the International Association of Judicial Independence and World Peace and heads the International Project of Judicial Independence. In 2008, the Mt. Scopus Standards of Judicial Independence were issued under his leadership. Between 1988 and 1996, Professor Shetreet served as a member of the Israeli Parliament, and was a cabinet minister under Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres. He was senior deputy mayor of Jerusalem between 1999 and 2003. He was a Judge of the Standard Contract Court and served as a member of the Chief Justice Landau Commission on the Israeli Court System. The author and editor of many books on the judiciary, Professor Shetreet is a member of the Royal Academy of Science and Arts of Belgium. Rabbi Walter Homolka PhD (King’s College London, 1992), PhD (University of Wales Trinity St. David, 2015), DHL (Hebrew Union College, New York, 2009), is a full professor of Modern Jewish Thought and the executive director of the School of Jewish Theology at the University of Potsdam (Germany). The rector of the Abraham Geiger College (since 2003) is Chairman of the Leo Baeck Foundation and of the Ernst Ludwig Ehrlich Scholarship Foundation in Potsdam. In addition, he has served as the executive director of the Masorti Zacharias Frankel College since 2013.The author of "Jüdisches Eherecht" and other publications on Jewish Law holds several distinctions: among them the Knight Commander’s Cross of the Austrian Merit Order and the 1st Class Federal Merit Order of Germany. In 2004, President Jacques Chirac admitted Rabbi Homolka to the French Legion of Honor.

Tradition and Equality in Jewish Marriage

Tradition and Equality in Jewish Marriage
Author: Melanie Malka Landau
Publsiher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2012-03-29
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781441139337

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Often when people have become alienated from their religious backgrounds, they access their traditions through lifecycle events such as marriage. At times, modern values such as gender equality may be at odds with some of the traditions; many of which have always been in a state of flux in relationship to changing social, economic and political realities. Traditional Jewish marriage is based on the man acquiring the woman, which has symbolic and actual ramifications. Grounded in the traditional texts yet accessible, this book shows how the marriage is an acquisition and contextualises the gender hierarchy of marriage within the rabbinic exclusion of women from Torah study, the highest cultural practice and women's exemption from positive commandments. Melanie Landau offers two alternative models of partnership that partially or fully bypass the non-reciprocity of traditional Jewish marriage and that have their basis in the ancient rabbinic texts.

An Introduction to Jewish Law

An Introduction to Jewish Law
Author: François-Xavier Licari
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 179
Release: 2019-03-28
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9781108421973

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This is the first book to present a systematic and synthetic introduction to Jewish law.