- In “Changes in Islamic Legal Culture in Customary Marriage at Uluan Musi Community” (Journal of Population and Social Studies 32 (2024)), Syahril Jamil (Universitas Islam Negeri Raden Fatah Palembang, Indonesia) and others explore how marriage in the Uluan Musi community in Indonesia is regulated by the interlocking Islamic, national, and customary laws.
- In “Critical Study of Sharia Regional Regulations on Women’s Emancipation” (International Journal of Religion 5, no. 2 (2024)), Mohamad Hidayat Muhtar (Faculty of Law, Universitas Negeri Gorontalo, Gorontalo, Indonesia) and others argue that the Indonesian Constitution can be interpreted to license the issuance of local shar’ī regulations in the country and also urge stakeholders to use such regulations to “accommodate women’s liberation.”
- In “Problems of Transliteration of Fiqh Legal Terms (Library Research on The Book Al-Fiqh Al-Islami Wa Adillatuhu Using the Al-Munawwir Dictionary)” (Journal of Social Work and Science Education 5, no. 1 (2024)), Izzat Muhammad Daud (Universitas Islam Negeri Sulthan Thaha Saifuddin Jambi) and others “investigate[] the difficulties encountered when translating fiqh terms from the Al-Munawwir dictionary to the ‘Islamic Fiqh wa Adillatuh’ book.”