Negotiating marriage: questions of morality and legitimacy in the Ghanaian Pentecostal diaspora

TitleNegotiating marriage: questions of morality and legitimacy in the Ghanaian Pentecostal diaspora
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2004
AuthorsR.A. van Dijk
Secondary TitleJournal of religion in Africa
Volume34
Issue4
Pagination438 - 467
Date Published2004///
Publication Languageeng
KeywordsBaptist Church, customary law, diasporas, family law, Ghana, marriage, marriage law, Netherlands, Pentecostalism, policy
Abstract

Among the many immigrant groups that have settled in the Netherlands, migrants recently arrived from Ghana have been perceived by the Dutch State as especially problematic. Explicit measures have been taken to investigate marriages of Ghanaians, as these appeared to be an avenue by which many acquired access to the Dutch welfare State. While the Dutch government tightened its immigration policies, many Ghanaian Pentecostal churches were emerging in the Ghanaian immigrant communities. An important function of these churches is to officiate over marriages; marriages that are perceived as lawful and righteous in the eyes of the migrant community but nonetheless do not have any legal basis as far as the Dutch State is concerned. This contribution explores why the Ghanaian community attributes great moral significance to the marriages that are taking place within their Pentecostal churches. It investigates the changing meaning of the functions of Pentecostal churches in Ghana and in the Netherlands by distinguishing civil morality from civic responsibility. It seeks to explore how, in both contexts, legitimacy is created as well as contested in the face of prevailing State-civil society relations. This exploration indicates why, in both situations, Pentecostalism is unlikely to develop into a civic religion in the full sense of the term. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract]

IR handle/ Full text URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1887/9493
Citation Key1021