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Jewish and Islamic Law

A Comparative Study of Custom During the Geonic Period

This is the first attempt to present a comprehensive comparative study of Jewish-Islamic law on a particular topic during the early Middle Ages. Libson's in-depth study of Islamic law, together with his expertise in the wide range of geonic and rabbinic literature, enable him to determine the influence of Muslim practice on geonic custom.

Islam and Lex gentium ” ( in Hebr . ) , in The Arab States : Processes and Basic
Problems ( in Hebr . ) , ed . E . Shaked , Tel Aviv 1978 , pp . 43 – 50 . - " Sharī ' a
and Namus in the Philosophical Thought of Maimonides ” ( in Hebr . ) , in
Teʻudah ...

Islam, Islamic Law, and the Turn to Violence

Islamic Law , Theory and Practice Religious Minorities in Islamic Law .
CHARACTERISTICS OF ISLAMIC GOVERNMENT To understand the nature of
Islamic government , one must first realize that for any state to survive , it must
have three ...

Reason, Revelation and Law in Islamic and Western Theory and History

This book engages the diverse meanings and interpretations of Islamic and Western law which have affected people and societies across the globe, past and present, in correlation to the epistemological groundings of those meanings and interpretations. The volume takes a distinctively comparative approach, advancing dialogue on crucial transnational and global debates over the history of Western and Islamic approaches to law, politics and society and their relevance for today. It discusses how fundamental concepts are understood and even translated from one historical or political context or one semantic domain to another. The book provides focused studies of key figures and theories in a manageable, accessible format useful for specialized academic courses and research as well as general audiences. These analyses will prove beneficial to scholars and students of religious studies, interreligious, intercultural, and international relations, political science, history, sociology, and related fields both within and beyond the Western and Islamic worlds, as well as generally educated readers who take interest in these issues and their ramifications.

This book engages the diverse meanings and interpretations of Islamic and Western law which have affected people and societies across the globe, past and present, in correlation to the epistemological groundings of those meanings and ...

Religion, Law, and Learning in Classical Islam

This second selection of articles by George Makdisi concentrates on the schools of religious thought and legal learning in the medieval Islamic world and their defence of orthodoxy. The author aims to review and re-assess the implications of the conflict between, first, the rationalist and the traditional theologians (the one accepting the influence of Greek philosophy, the other rejecting it), and then between one of these traditionalist schools - the Hanbali school of law - and Sufi mysticism. One of the most important consequences of the first of these confrontations, he contends, was the emergence of the schools of law as the guardians of the faith and theological orthodoxy.

This second selection of articles by George Makdisi concentrates on the schools of religious thought and legal learning in the medieval Islamic world and their defence of orthodoxy.

State Law as Islamic Law in Modern Egypt

The Incorporation of the Sharī a Into Egyptian Constitutional Law

Explores the decision by the government of Egypt in the 1970s to constitutionalize Islamic Sharī a, and discusses its impact on Egypt's constitutional jurisprudence.

Explores the decision by the government of Egypt in the 1970s to constitutionalize Islamic Sharī a, and discusses its impact on Egypt's constitutional jurisprudence.

The Islamic School of Law

Evolution, Devolution, and Progress

These selected papers from the III International Conference on Islamic Legal Studies, held in 2000 at Harvard Law School, offer building blocks toward the entire edifice of understanding the complex development of the madhhab, a development that, even in the contemporary dissolution of madhhab lines and grouping, continues to fascinate.

From Fatwas to Furūʻ : Growth and Change in Islamic Substantive Law , ” in
Islamic Law and Society , 1 : 29 – 65 . - 1994b . “ Murder in Cordoba : ijtihād , iftā '
and the Evolution of Substantive Law in Mediaeval Islam , ” in Acta Orientalia , 55
 ...

Islamic Law

Volume III focuses on the 'consolidation' and consequent perceived 'stagnation' of Islamic law in the medieval period alluded to in the traditional accounts of Islamic legal theory. The final volume in the collection examines Islamic law in the modern period, and the challenges of living in a modern, technologically advanced world. Supplemented with a full index, Islamic Law includes a comprehensive introduction newly written by the editor which places the collected material in its historical and intellectual context. It is certain to be valued as a vital research resource." -- Publisher description.

The final volume in the collection examines Islamic law in the modern period, and the challenges of living in a modern, technologically advanced world.

Encyclopedia of Islamic Law

A Compendium of the Views of the Major Schools

"The various schools of law are compared and contrasted on all issues of the Shariah including individual worship (purification, prescribed prayer, prescribed fasting, prescribed charity and prescribed pilgrimage), economic issues including inheritance, endowments, wills and bequests, legal disability and social issues of marriage and divorce."--Publisher's website.

Intent in Islamic Law

Motive and Meaning in Medieval Sunnī Fiqh

This is the first broad study of the treatment of intent in Islamic law, examining ritual, commercial, family, and penal law and providing new insights into Muslim understandings of law, religious ritual, action, agency, and language.

This is the first broad study of the treatment of intent in Islamic law, examining ritual, commercial, family, and penal law and providing new insights into Muslim understandings of law, religious ritual, action, agency, and language.

Islamic Imperial Law

Harun-Al-Rashid's Codification Project

Despite the historical and contemporary significance of the Sharia, it has not yet been possible to solve the puzzle of its origins. Whereas previous research has postulated a greater or lesser degree of endogenous Islamic development, the present study reaches a different conclusion, namely that at the end of the 8th century Muslim state lawyers in Baghdad codified an Islamic “Imperial Law”, oriented strongly towards Roman-Byzantine law. It is part of an Islamic-Byzantine context, and can only be explained against this intercultural background.

Abundance of Comparative Studies Although there is almost nobody to maintain
direct reception we find a considerable number of studies comparing Islamic law
with one of the pre-Islamic legal systems such as Jewish law, Sassanid law, ...