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Poulter

Dr. Sebastian Poulter was a distinguished legal scholar, and an advocate of ethnic diversity (and its recognition) and warning against discrimination and islamophobia. After studying law at Oxford, he qualified in 1967 as a solicitor in London. Later in 1967, he was appointed as lecturer (and later senior lecturer) in law in the University of Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland located in Lesotho. The period from 1967 to 1971 saw the establishment of Sebastian's reputation as a dedicated teacher and the start of his long and distinguished record of research and writing, leading to seven books and some 40 articles. His early work was about the legal system of Lesotho, especially Lesotho family law. In 1971 Sebastian was appointed lecturer at Sussex University, Southampton where he remained until 1997. In 1977 he contributed to the drafting of Lesotho's legislation, directed a research project and acted again as Chairman of the Pardons Committee. He fundamentally influenced the development of law in England as well as in Lesotho. In Lesotho he contributed to the establishment of a legal structure and, and to the training of many local lawyers. In England he studied the legal and social position of ethnic minorities, covering civil liberties, family law, criminal and employment law as well as philosophical and political aspects. The focus on ethnic minority law led to many publications, to advice and expertise being sought by the Commission for Racial Equality and the Runnymede Trust. In 1996 he contributed to the extension of the Race Relations Act to religious discrimination. In 1997 he was co-author of a report of a Commission of the Runnymede Trust on discrimination resulting from unfounded hostility to Islam ("Islamophobia"). About his views, he warned both against islamophobia, as against "multi-cultural tolerance'", seen as a shield for oppression and injustice within the immigrant communities themselves. He argued that the (British and other European/Western) states had to recognize ethnic diversity in the interests of social peace, albeit within the limits of the fundamental principles of the secular democracy. Poulter also strongly condemned all forms of female circumcision as female genital mutilation, thus mutilation and therefore wholly illegal. Starting from the '70's, Muslim organizations in the UK requested that Muslim personal law was to be formally recognized as part of the British legal system. Poulter was asked for advice in this by the British authorities. He concluded that this would be impossible for several reasons, among others that it would severely jeopardize the equal rights of women.

References

  1. English Law and Ethnic Minority Customs, London, Butterworths, 1986
  2. The Claim to a Separate Islamic System of Personal Law for British Muslims, Chibli Mallat and Jane Connors, Islamic Family Law, London, Dordrecht and Boston: Graham & Trotman, 1990.
  3. Asian traditions and English law, Stoke on Trent, Trentham and Runnymede Trust, 1990.
  4. Towards Legislative Reform of the Blasphemy and Racial Hatred Laws, in UKACIA document "Need for Reform", 1993.
  5. Ethnicity, Law and Human Rights, 1997

 

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