Court-annexed mediation for settling family disputes in Indonesia /
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(Published version)
Date
2012
Authors
Syukur, Fatahillah Abdul,
Editors
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Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Type:
thesis
Citation
Statement of Responsibility
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Abstract
Court-annexed mediation has been part of the Indonesian judiciary system since 2003. This thesis critically examines the strengths and limitations of traditional, Western and Islamic approaches to mediation, and how elements of these approaches could contribute to the development of more culturally relevant and gender-sensitive approaches to court-annexed mediation in Indonesia. A critical Foucauldian and feminist post-structuralist approach was used to analyse the Western model of court-annexed mediation used for settling family disputes in District and Sharia Courts. The researcher identified how the training and practices of mediators addressed the issues of culture and gender, and how the model differed from approaches to dispute resolution used in the indigenous and religious communities.
School/Discipline
University of South Australia. School of Psychology, Social Work and Social Policy.
School of Psychology, Social Work and Social Policy.
School of Psychology, Social Work and Social Policy.
Dissertation Note
Thesis (PhD)--University of South Australia, 2012.
Provenance
Copyright 2012 Fatahillah Abdul Syukur
Description
1 ethesis (xvi, 264 pages) :
illustrations
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 223-246)
illustrations
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 223-246)
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