- In “Legitimating Sultanic Rule in Arabic, Turkish and Persian—Late Mamluk Rulers as Authors of Religious Poetry” (in Rulers as Authors in the Islamic World, eds., Maribel Fierro et al. (Brill, 2024)), Christian Mauder (Free University of Berlin) “outlines the multilingual poetic production of . . . Mamluk Sultans, explores the religious and political significance of their writings, and sheds light on their reception by contemporaries and posterity.”
- In “Injustice Anywhere: A Comparative Law Analysis of Saudi Arabia’s Criminal Justice System” (UC Law SF International Law Review 47 (2024)), Cooper C. Millhouse “illuminates the goals Saudi Arabia’s justice system, inspects how those goals parallel the goals of other common law and civil law systems, and evaluates whether Saudi Arabia’s system is able to effectively accomplish its aims.”
- In “War Crimes from the Perspective of Islamic Law and International Law” (International Seminar of Islamic Studies, February 2024), Rajarif Syah Akbar Simatupang (Universitas Muhammadiyah Sumatera Utara, Indonesia) and others argue that in Indonesia, as a conceptual matter, “Islamic law, national law and international law regulate the conditions of war. “
- In “The Hijriyah Calendar Perspective Islamic Law: What And How?” (Pena Justisia: Media Komunikasi Dan Kajian Hukum 22, no. 3 (2023)), Misbah Khusurur and others argue that the Islamic “calendar affects legal practices such as the determination of the start of Ramadan, family law, prayer times, and religious celebrations. However, there are differing opinions and challenges in harmonizing Islamic legal provisions based on the Hijri calendar with national positive law.”