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Scholarship in “Plain English”: Noah Feldman on Law, Islam, and the Future of the Middle East

By Cem Tecimer

Source: Noah Feldman, Law, Islam, and the Future of the Middle East 84 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 617-635 (2006-2007)

Summary:

In his invited lecture at the University of Detroit-Mercy School of Law (The Mcelroy Lecture), Noah Feldman engages the idea of separation of powers in Islamic law and its contemporaneous manifestations. He acknowledges that, unlike in secular societies, in Muslim-majority countries, people believe that law is a transcendental ideal: “the Muslim world associate[s] Islam specifically with a system of laws…” (p. 618).

Having established the religious nature of the Muslim conception of what law is, Feldman argues that Islamic law inevitably embraces the concept of separation of powers. Because Muslims regard the Qurʾān as God’s immutable words and as a source of law [cf. Lowry, Reading the Qur’an as a Law Book], rulers in the Muslim world apply laws as opposed to making them. Yet, because the Qurʾān and additional authority can never cover all aspects of human life, interpretation is inevitable—and that interpretive function is entrusted to a community of scholars. This interaction between the community of scholars who pronounced the law and the ruler who applied it “amounted to, in historical terms, a separation of powers…” (p. 620).

Feldman is quick to add one important caveat: that the separation of powers was not a “theological necessity with Islam” (p. 620). In the Sunni tradition, the Prophet was regarded as a figure who not only transmitted to believers the divine law, but also “told people how to apply it”—effectively unifying executive and interpretive functions at himself (p. 620). Similarly, in Shīʿī Islam, “not only the Prophet, but the men who followed him, his successors” did the exact same thing (p. 621).

Despite this caveat, the separation of powers was an entrenched notion in Islamic legal culture, Feldman argues, until the introduction of modern constitutions to the Islamic world. The problem with the modern era, and its introduction of Western-type constitutions to the Muslim world, in Feldman’s view, is that “they no longer had the scholars who were the traditional keepers of Islamic law”—in other words, the community of scholars who traditionally interpreted the law, and when necessary, corrected the ruler, no longer existed under the Western type of constitutional scheme (p. 621). “Once the scholars had been sidelined, the consequence was what you might expect: a strong ruler, a strong executive…” (p. 622).

Feldman then turns to modern forms of Islamic constitutionalism to examine why, as is the case in Iraq, Islamic-oriented political parties garner most of the popular support: he argues that it is, at least partly, because Islam’s promise of a workable government with a notion of separation of powers.

Further, referencing once again the divine nature of Islamic law, and how according to Islam, with no exceptions, everyone is subordinated to law, Feldman concludes that Islam embraces the notion of the rule of law too—unlike, as Feldman notes, the Roman Empire, where the ruler was regarded as being above the law.

Having established that separation of powers and the rule of law are concepts not foreign, but on the contrary, quite central to Islamic law, Feldman returns to discussion of how modern constitutions, especially with regards to the Sunni world, caused “a possibly irreversible loss of prestige” among the scholars—exacerbating the modern state of separation of powers. Feldman argues that Iran is not a fitting example, because in Iran, the system is what is “sometimes called … the Rule of the Jurist….” Saudi Arabia, on the other hand, has subjected its scholars to an overly powerful monarchy—again disrupting the balance between jurists and the ruler.

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