Since the days of the Shah Bano case in the late 1980s, efforts have been made by civil society organisations to challenge the Islamic patriarchy that the AIMPLB stands for. These efforts have some impact and are manifested in the decision by the AIMPLB to have women members on its board. Furthermore, in 2005, the All India Muslim Women Personal Board (AIMWPB) was also set up. For many civil society groups, particularly the ones like the Bhartiya Muslim Mahila Andolan (BMMA), the big concern has been the lack of the codification of family law. Such a law has been codified in many Muslim countries in the Middle East and Africa following the family law of the Ottoman Empire, 1917. Personal status codes were developed in Jordan (1951), Syria (1953), Tunisia (1957), Morocco (1958), Iraq (1959) and other countries.