"A fascinating story that provides new layers to legal studies and women’s history as well as gender relationships. It shows how women managed to challenge the system of their subjugation in ways that are revealing about their capacity to adapt to constraining structural factors and show the power of women’s agency in pre-modern North Africa." - Driss Maghraoui, editor of Revisiting the Colonial Past in Morocco
"A pioneering, deeply-researched, thoughtful analysis of how everyday Islamic law functioned in fourteenth and fifteenth century Northwest Africa. . . . Admiral’s work is also invaluable for expanding the horizons of Islamic legal studies towards thirteenth-fifteenth century Morocco and the rich archive of historical and legal sources which demand further exploration." - Asma Sayeed, author of Women and the Transmission of Religious Knowledge in Islam