- In “De-Europeanisation as Counter-conduct: The Case of Non-Muslim Religious Minorities in Turkey” (Romanian Journal of International Affairs 22, no. 2 (2022)), Serap Gunes (Masaryk University) “analyse[s] the dynamics through which the Turkish government seeks to uproot and reverse the Europeanisation in minority rights, and how this counter-conduct works in the case of Armenian community.”
- In “Church Against State: How Industry Groups Lead the Religious Liberty Assault on Civil Rights, Healthcare Policy, and the Administrative State” (Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, forthcoming), Joanna Wuest (Mount Holyoke College) and Briana Last (Stony Brook University), focusing on a few case studies from the United States, highlight “the threat that industry-funded religious liberty legal organizations pose for effective healthcare regulation, reproductive healthcare access, and civil rights enforcement for sexual and gender minorities.”
- In “An Overview of the Development of Maldivian Contract Law and its Sources” (SSRN, December 13, 2022), Husnu Al Suood (Maldives Law Institute) “trace[s] the development of the Maldivian contract law alongside Islamic Shariah – a major source of Maldivian law.”
- In “Caliphs, Jinns, and Sufifi Shrines: The Protection of Cultural Heritage and Cultural Rights under Islamic Law” (Emory International Law Review 36, no. 4 (2022)), Eleni Polymenopoulou (Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Qatar) “examines the position of the Islamic legal tradition on arts and cultural heritage, including its pitfalls, and argues that a better understanding of Muslim state practice is needed to enhance the protection of cultural rights in the Muslim world.”
- In “Limits to Personal Autonomy in Islamic Bioethical Deliberations on End-of-Life Issues in Light of the Debate on Euthanasia” (in End-of-Life Care, Dying and Death in the Islamic Moral Tradition, 2022), Ayman Shabana (Georgetown University) “examines the trilateral relationship within the Islamic religious-moral framework between personal autonomy and individual rights, on the one hand, and divine as well as collective rights, on the other, in light of the debate on euthanasia.”
- “Anthropologist Fallou Ngom discovered Ajami, a modified Arabic script. Its existence shows that African people labeled illiterate for not writing in French were anything but.”