Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Law and The (Re)Production of Class Hierarchies in Egypt

This thesis investigates how Egypt’s legal system, structurally tilted toward the elite and constitutive of inequality, has interacted with the country’s entrenched culture of class-based discrimination to produce a legal culture uniquely comfortable with hierarchy. It contends that class-based disc...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Abdelnaby, Ahmad
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2026
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613432734285824
access_status_str Open Access
author Abdelnaby, Ahmad
author_browse Abdelnaby, Ahmad
author_facet Abdelnaby, Ahmad
author_sort Abdelnaby, Ahmad
collection Thesis
description This thesis investigates how Egypt’s legal system, structurally tilted toward the elite and constitutive of inequality, has interacted with the country’s entrenched culture of class-based discrimination to produce a legal culture uniquely comfortable with hierarchy. It contends that class-based discrimination in Egypt has evolved from a social prejudice into a juridical condition, one in which the law does not merely mirror inequality but actively constructs and rationalizes it. By examining the intersection between legal structure and Egypt’s entrenched moral order of class-based discrimination, the study reveals a legal culture that no longer hides its hierarchies behind the veil of neutrality but articulates them as expressions of order and respectability. Drawing on Marx, Weber, and Bourdieu, and informed by Hale, Galanter, and the Critical Legal Studies movement, the thesis demonstrates how doctrines such as “harm,” “suitability,” and “family values” transform social prejudice into legal principle. Through case studies in family law, public appointments, and the Cybercrime Law, it exposes how judicial discourse and administrative discretion translate class morality into legal reason. In doing so, Egyptian law emerges not only as a passive reflection of class hierarchy but as one of its most efficient architects. The thesis ultimately calls for a reorientation of legal scholarship toward reflexivity, one that recognizes law’s complicity in reproducing hierarchy and confronts its own comfort with inequality as the price of its authority.
format Thesis
id oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3767
institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:36:03.647Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher AUC Knowledge Fountain
publisherStr AUC Knowledge Fountain
record_format dspace
source_str AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3767 Law and The (Re)Production of Class Hierarchies in Egypt Abdelnaby, Ahmad This thesis investigates how Egypt’s legal system, structurally tilted toward the elite and constitutive of inequality, has interacted with the country’s entrenched culture of class-based discrimination to produce a legal culture uniquely comfortable with hierarchy. It contends that class-based discrimination in Egypt has evolved from a social prejudice into a juridical condition, one in which the law does not merely mirror inequality but actively constructs and rationalizes it. By examining the intersection between legal structure and Egypt’s entrenched moral order of class-based discrimination, the study reveals a legal culture that no longer hides its hierarchies behind the veil of neutrality but articulates them as expressions of order and respectability. Drawing on Marx, Weber, and Bourdieu, and informed by Hale, Galanter, and the Critical Legal Studies movement, the thesis demonstrates how doctrines such as “harm,” “suitability,” and “family values” transform social prejudice into legal principle. Through case studies in family law, public appointments, and the Cybercrime Law, it exposes how judicial discourse and administrative discretion translate class morality into legal reason. In doing so, Egyptian law emerges not only as a passive reflection of class hierarchy but as one of its most efficient architects. The thesis ultimately calls for a reorientation of legal scholarship toward reflexivity, one that recognizes law’s complicity in reproducing hierarchy and confronts its own comfort with inequality as the price of its authority. 2026-02-15T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2706 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3767/viewcontent/ahmad_abdelnaby_thesis.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain classism egypt law social stratification family law gated compounds westernization legal reasoning Administrative Law Construction Law Criminal Law Criminal Procedure Family Law Human Rights Law Judges Law and Society Property Law and Real Estate
spellingShingle classism
egypt
law
social stratification
family law
gated compounds
westernization
legal reasoning
Administrative Law
Construction Law
Criminal Law
Criminal Procedure
Family Law
Human Rights Law
Judges
Law and Society
Property Law and Real Estate
Abdelnaby, Ahmad
Law and The (Re)Production of Class Hierarchies in Egypt
title Law and The (Re)Production of Class Hierarchies in Egypt
title_full Law and The (Re)Production of Class Hierarchies in Egypt
title_fullStr Law and The (Re)Production of Class Hierarchies in Egypt
title_full_unstemmed Law and The (Re)Production of Class Hierarchies in Egypt
title_short Law and The (Re)Production of Class Hierarchies in Egypt
title_sort law and the re production of class hierarchies in egypt
topic classism
egypt
law
social stratification
family law
gated compounds
westernization
legal reasoning
Administrative Law
Construction Law
Criminal Law
Criminal Procedure
Family Law
Human Rights Law
Judges
Law and Society
Property Law and Real Estate
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2706
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3767/viewcontent/ahmad_abdelnaby_thesis.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT abdelnabyahmad lawandthereproductionofclasshierarchiesinegypt