- In “Attitude and Islamic banking adoption: moderating effects of pricing of conventional bank products and social influence” (Journal of Islamic Accounting and Business Research 13, no. 3 (2022)), Rachel Mindra and others aim “to establish the relationship between attitude and the intention to adopt Islamic banking in a Christian-dominated country and whether such a relationship is moderated and boosted by pricing of conventional bank products and social influence.”
- In “A Comparative Study of Risk Management Practices between Islamic and Conventional Banks in Pakistan” (PhD diss., Cardiff Metropolitan University, 2016), Asma Abdul Rehman, “using content analysis through annual reports of five Islamic and conventional banks for the six year time period from 2008 to 2013,” finds that “Islamic banks are found to be significantly different from their conventional counterparts in risk identification, risk management practices, liquidity risk analysis and risk governance.”