The author discusses the complex ways in which a multiplicity of conflicting laws relevant to marriage and divorce have affected Malaysian women, both Muslim and non-Muslim. Further, it examines efforts to standardize statute and practice in these areas from the 1970s to the present. It focuses in particular on multiple marriage statutes in effect until 1970 for Chinese and Hindu Malays and on the Law Reform Act 1976 that attempted to regulate customary marriage practices for non-Muslims. It also examines the codification of Islamic family law in the 1980s as a way of clarifying the legal rights of Muslim women, focusing on the Kelantan Island Family Law Enactment 1983. It also describes political action by women in Malaysia to raise public awareness about domestic violence, to amend the Penal Code on matters of violence against women, and to establish a training program for police in rape investigation.