In February and March, we hosted a roundtable on “Knowledge in the Islamic Court.” We thank the contributors for their essays. In case you missed one, here they are (in order of publication):
- Ari Schriber, Knowledge in the Islamic Court
- Mashal Saif, Evidence for the Laity but not the Courts: Dreams and Blasphemy in Contemporary Pakistan
- Aya Bejermi, Kashf ṭibbī: Forensic Expertise as Probative Knowledge in Ḥajr Decisions of 20th-Century Egypt
- Léon Buskens, Material Proof: Some Notes on Legal Documents in Morocco as Physical Objects
- Dominik Krell, Modern Forensic Technology and the Evolution of Islamic Criminal Law in Saudi Arabia
- Irene Schneider, Murder in Mandate Palestine: The Case of Young Offenders

