%0 Thesis
%9 Doctoral
%A Muhammad Lutfi Hakim, NIM.: 19300016152
%B PASCASARJANA
%D 2024
%F digilib:66457
%I UIN SUNAN KALIJAGA YOGYAKARTA
%K Hak Asuh Anak, Hak Waris, Motivasi, Non-Muslim, Pengadilan Agama
%P 291
%T HAK NON-MUSLIM DALAM PUTUSAN PENGADILAN  AGAMA DI INDONESIA: PENGETAHUAN HUKUM, MOTIVASI DAN INTERPRETASI  HUKUM HAKIM
%U https://digilib.uin-suka.ac.id/id/eprint/66457/
%X Non-Muslims have unequal rights compared to Muslims in the  legal norms and religious justice practices in Indonesia. This can be  seen in several regulations regarding the rights of non-Muslims in the  family, such as custody of children born in Islamic marriages and  inheritance rights from Muslim testators. Article 105 of the  Compilation of Islamic Law (KHI) grants mothers the right to custody  of children under 12 years of age (mumayyiz), regardless of their  religious affiliation. Article 171 KHI requires that heirs must be  Muslim and not be legally prevented from becoming heirs. Based on  these provisions, non-Muslim relatives are not entitled to a share of  the inheritance of Muslim decedents. The divergence in legal attitudes  of religious judges regarding these two cases involving non-Muslim  rights is particularly noteworthy. This is due to several factors that  suggest a potential shift in the judges’ perspectives, particularly  concerning religious interpretation, social change, and human rights  considerations. In light of this, this dissertation aims to analyze the  variation in religious judges’ knowledge and motivations when  interpreting legal provisions in these cases: child custody between  interfaith parents and inheritance rights between heirs of different  religions.  This dissertation employs a socio-legal approach, combining  empirical research with a meticulous analysis of primary data: twentyfour  religious court decisions on child custody and inheritance cases  involving interfaith families (nine from lower courts and fifteen  reaching cassation). These decisions were obtained from the Directory  of Supreme Court Decisions, relevant religious courts, and various  research findings. The analysis utilizes the interpretive sociological  theory of Alfred Schütz (1899-1959).  This dissertation identifies three key findings. First, the  ambiguity of state law (official law) governing child custody and  inheritance rights between interfaith families creates space for  religious judges to draw on various Islamic legal sources beyond  official law. These unofficial references include religious texts, ulama  opinions, Islamic legal maxims, and fatwas. Second, religious judges’  legal reasoning in these cases is driven by two primary motivations:  theological and social. Dominant theological justifications often lead  to denying child custody to non-Muslim parents, while dominant  social considerations can influence granting inheritance rights to non-  Muslim relatives. Third, the variation in religious judges’ motivational preferences significantly impacts their interpretive discretion. This  results in the construction of two distinct models of interpretation:  conservative and progressive. Conservative interpretation prioritizes a  literal application of the law, while progressive interpretation involves  a broader interpretation, even if it contradicts traditional fiqh  principles. Building on these three findings, this dissertation argues  that the divergence in religious judges’ legal approaches to these cases  stems from the interplay of theological and social motivations. These  motivations shape how judges select legal references and exercise  interpretive discretion. This interplay, with motivation at its core,  offers a novel theoretical framework to rationalize the disparities in  judicial decisions concerning non-Muslim rights in religious courts.  By analyzing these decisions as social actions by judges, this  dissertation contributes to legal theory by proposing “intersubjective  interpretation” as a term for the interconnectedness of these three  aspects in judicial practice.
%Z Promotor: Prof. Dr. H. Khoiruddin Nasution, M.A. dan Dr. Suhadi, S.Ag., MA.