- In “Transformation and Future Challenges of Islamic Law in Indonesia” (Al Istinbath: Jurnal Hukum Islam 8, no. 1 (2023)), A. Malthuf Siroj (Universitas Nurul Jadid, Probolinggo Indonesia) and others “investigate the transformation of Islamic law starting from pre-entry of Islam to Indonesia, entry of Islam, colonialism, and independence to current reformation in Indonesia, as well as various challenges to the formalization of Islamic law.”
- In “Reconstruction of Ali Yafie’s Thinking in the Field of Social Fiqh in the Development of Islamic Law (Critical Review)” (Al Manhaj: Jurnal Hukum dan Pranata Sosial Islam 5, no. 1 (2023)), Amrin Amrin (State Islamic University Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta) and others investigate “Ali Yafie’s thoughts on the development of Islamic law in Indonesia.”
- Tamir Moustafa (Simon Fraser University) reviews Rachel M. Scott‘s (Virginia Tech) Recasting Islamic Law: Religion and the Nation State in Egyptian Constitution Making (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2021) in Law & Social Inquiry.
- In “Quo Vadis of Islamic Law in National Law” (Russian Law Journal 11, no. 3 (2023)), Dri Santoso (Institut Agama Islam Negeri Metro, Indonesia) and others study the origins, current state, and future of Islamic law in Indonesia’s national legal system.
- In “Afghanistan, War Crisis, and Gender Apartheid: A Comment on AfghanWomen as War Victims and Nullified ‘Objects’ of Human Rights” (SSRN, May 18, 2023), Suparna Roy (Global Institute of Management and Technology) argues that “[r]ecent control of the Taliban’s rule on Afghanistan has reflected and repeated the historical totalitarian sense of dictatorship and gender apartheid[.]”