Maaike Voorhoeve is an assistant professor in the Department of History, European Studies and Religious Studies and a member of the Modern history section of the Amsterdam School of Historical Studies. She specializes in the history of law and gender in the Muslim world, with a focus on North Africa. In 2024, Voorhoeve received funding from the UvA RPA "Decolonial Futures" to organise a conference on law, gender and colonialism in Muslim societies, together with Mariam Hothout.
After her PhD (University of Amsterdam, 2011), Voorhoeve held post-doctoral positions at Harvard Law School, Freie Universität, Humboldt Universität, and the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales. She was an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow and affiliated to the EUME programme of the Forum Transregionale Studien in Berlin. Between 2020 and 2024, Voorhoeve was chief editor of the Dutch journal ZemZem on the Middle East, Nort Africa and Islam. Until September 2023, she was co-director of the Amsterdam Centre for Middle Eastern Studies. Voorhoeve teaches courses on Islamic law, Islam and gender, colonialism and postcolonial theory.
Voorhoeve published two books, Family Law in Islam (I.B. Tauris, 2012, 2nd ed. 2016) and Gender and Divorce Law in North Africa (I.B. Tauris, 2014), and a number of articles on legislation and adjudication in the field of family law and gender-coded criminal law in the Muslim world. Her most recent publication is "'The husband is the main breadwinner.’ Gender roles, labour participation and marriage in colonial and post-colonial Tunisia (1881-2011)" (Arab Law Quarterly, forthcoming).
Voorhoeve's current research project examines the influence of colonialism on gender laws in Muslim territories. Her focus lies on French colonial rule in the Maghreb and West-Africa, but she's equally interested in the influence of Dutch, British, Russian and Ottoman imperialism and its consequences for the law in Muslim territories, both in the Muslim world and beyond (e.g. the former Dutch colony of Surinam).
Maaike Voorhoeve welcomes PhD proposals that wish to examine issues of law and gender in Muslim contexts, either in the contemporary context or their historical development.
PhD Supervision:
Lisa Schouten, The sound of Egyptian counterculture: rewriting notions of class, identity and culture through Mahraganat (with Jaap Kooijman)
Mai Abbas, The representation of gender dynamics in Egyptian television series (with Joke Hermes and Jaap Kooijman)