By Ari Schriber Introduction: Centering Evidence, Proof, and Procedure in Islamic Law What counts as proof in an Islamic court? How does technological advancement impact notions of evidence? How does … Continue reading ::Roundtable:: Knowledge in the Islamic Court
Weekend Scholarship Roundup
SCHOLARSHIP ROUNDUP On Islamic Law: In “Rethinking marriage—and divorce—in Muslim Indonesia” (University of Colorado Boulder Blog) “CU Boulder sociologist Rachel Rinaldo’s research uncovers how Indonesian women are re-shaping marriage and its end within Islamic law, with implications far beyond Southeast Asia.” In “Inhabiting the Threshold (Dihlīz): The Madrasa Between Inheritance and Interrogation” (Hashiya), Ebrahim Moosa (University of Notre Dame) asks… CONTINUE READING
How did jurists interpret and practice law in al-Andalus in the Umayyad period?
By Janina Safran The question arose in a recent round table discussion and is challenging to answer for three central reasons.[1] First are the usual problems of little textual evidence: … Continue reading How did jurists interpret and practice law in al-Andalus in the Umayyad period?
Welcome to our June Guest Blogger: Janina Safran
Janina Safran is Associate Professor of History at The Pennsylvania State University. Her field is Islamic history (c. 600–1250), and her particular area of research is al-Andalus (Islamic Iberia) and … Continue reading Welcome to our June Guest Blogger: Janina Safran
Islamic Law in the News Roundup
ISLAMIC LAW IN THE NEWS In Nigeria, “the Kano State Hisbah Board has said its mass wedding programme is open to both Muslims and Christians.” “Islamic scholar Dr. Muhammad Salah has urged Muslims to embrace artificial intelligence (AI) to expand Islamic education and Da’wah, while stressing that its use must be guided by authentic Islamic knowledge and ethical standards.” “Cambodia… CONTINUE READING
Weekend Scholarship Roundup
SCHOLARSHIP ROUNDUP On Islamic Law: In a recent episode of New Books in Islamic Studies, Shehnaz Haqqani (Mercer University) and Edith Szanto (University of Alabama) “explore specific Muharram practices, including self-flagellation, the wedding of Qasim, and other ritualized forms of mourning, as well as gendered dynamics in who participates and why. [They] discuss what these practices looked like on the… CONTINUE READING
Islamic Law in the News Roundup
ISLAMIC LAW IN THE NEWS “Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi…urged religious scholars to support Islamabad in its fight against ‘terrorism,’ urging them to inform the masses that Islam discourages anti-state activities.” “Calls to fight ‘Sharia’ are not new to Texas Republican politics, but as the border loses emotional force for voters, fear of Islam is back in a big way.”… CONTINUE READING
Weekend Scholarship Roundup
SCHOLARSHIP ROUNDUP On Islamic Law: In How Commerce Became Legal: Merchants and Market Governance in Nineteenth-Century Egypt (Stanford University Press), Omar Youssef Cheta (Syracuse University) observes that “when Egypt’s markets opened to private capital in the 1840s, a new infrastructure of commercial laws and institutions emerged. Egypt became the site of profound legal experimentation, and the resulting commercial sphere reflected… CONTINUE READING
Islamic Law in the News Roundup
ISLAMIC LAW IN THE NEWS “In war zones and disaster areas, food can become a serious problem for Muslim soldiers and refugees. The US Military’s packaged, ready-to-eat meals (MREs) were a huge success when they were first introduced during the Second World War. They were built to last a long time without going bad. But as more people of different… CONTINUE READING
Weekend Scholarship Roundup
SCHOLARSHIP ROUNDUP On Islamic Law: In Ethnographic Reflections on Marriage in Dhofar, Oman (Anthem Press), Marielle Risse (Dhofar University) “examines how middle-class Muslim men and women in Dhofar, Oman, make and negotiate marital choices, tracing every stage of marriage through their own personal accounts.” In “Echoes of Empire: Persian Kingship in the Medieval Islamic World” (The Multicultural Middle Ages Podcast),… CONTINUE READING
Weekend Scholarship Roundup
SCHOLARSHIP ROUNDUP On Islamic Law: In “Three lives, one vision: how Dunant, Demidoff and Abdelkader shaped modern humanitarianism” (ICRC Blog) International Committee of the Red Cross experts Anastasia Kushleyko, Cédric Cotter, and Ahmed Al-Dawoody “revisit the contributions of Swiss businessman Henry Dunant, Russian philanthropist Anatole Demidoff, and Algerian scholar and leader Emir Abdelkader. Through their efforts to protect prisoners of war,… CONTINUE READING