Abbasi, Muhammad Z.2022-12-172023-01-192022-12-172023-01-192021Abassi MZ (2021) Sexualization of Sharīʿa: Application of Islamic Criminal (Ḥudūd) Laws in Pakistan. Islamic Law and Society. 29(3): 319-342.RMSID:212705098http://hdl.handle.net/10454/19293YesIn 1979, General Zia ul-Haq promulgated the Hudood Ordinances to provide Islamic punishments for several offenses, but the prosecution for extra-marital sex (zin.) has been disproportionately higher. Based on the analysis of reported judgments, I argue that the higher rate of prosecutions for zin. was a direct result of new laws. Despite carrying the name “Hudood”, these Ordinances specified several ta.z.r offenses with the objective of ensuring prosecutions. By incorporating .add and ta.z.r offenses for zin., the Zina Ordinance blurred the distinction between consensual sex and rape, and thus exposed victim women, who reported rape, to prosecution for consensual sex. The Qazf Ordinance, which might have curbed the filing of false accusations of zin., encouraged them by providing the complainants the defense of good faith. The number of zin. cases has decreased after the reform of the Zina Ordinance and the Qazf Ordinance under the Protection of Women Act, 2006.en© 2021 Brill. Reproduced in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy.Sexualization of Islamic criminal law (ḥudūd)Consensual sex and rapePatriarchyFaith-based application of Islamic lawSharī‘aPakistanSexualization of Sharī‘a: Application of Islamic Criminal law (ḥūdūd) in PakistanArticlehttps://doi.org/10.1163/15685195-bja10016Unspecified2022-12-17