How do women use courts within the context of paternity lawsuits? This
study analyzes the challenges that the formal legal approach to
empowering women faces once it is translated into everyday socio-legal
experiences and court repertoires. It also seeks to trace the
pathologies inherent in personal status law reform and normal legal
practices in Egypt, attesting to the limitations of law as an agent of
social change in the private domain of the family. It mainly sheds light
on the difficulties of separating formal legal rules from informal
social practices. It also explores the problem of paternity claims in
Egypt. Adding to growing literature on the use of legal mobilization to
advance gender equity, this study offers insights on the often-neglected
role of social norms in court experiences, often leading to unexpected
consequences that sometimes defy the intended goals behind policies and
legislation.