Islamic Law and Legal System
Biographical note
Frank E. Vogel, J.D. (1975), American University, Ph.D. (1993) in Islamic Law, Harvard University, is Assistant Professor at Harvard Law School. He has published extensively on Islamic legal theory and application, including Islamic Law and Finance (Kluwer, 1998).
Readership
Students and scholars in Islamic studies (including law, religious sciences, history); comparative law, legal history, and legal anthropology; Middle Eastern law, history, and politics; sociology and anthropology; comparative religion.
Reviews
'Cet étude [...] est remarquable par sa précision, sa clarté et l'érudition…'
Nahas M. Mahieddin, Studia Islamica, 2001.
' Einer der wichtigsten Aspekte dieses Buche ist, dass es Vogel gelingt, den viel zitierten Schleier zu lüften, welcher über dem islamischen Rechtssystem Saudi-Arabiens liegt.'
Sebastian Maisel, PAVO.
Nahas M. Mahieddin, Studia Islamica, 2001.
' Einer der wichtigsten Aspekte dieses Buche ist, dass es Vogel gelingt, den viel zitierten Schleier zu lüften, welcher über dem islamischen Rechtssystem Saudi-Arabiens liegt.'
Sebastian Maisel, PAVO.
€127.00$165.00
R. Kevin Jaques
This publication examines how a medieval Syrian Shāfiʿī jurist, Ibn Qāḍī Shuhbah (d. 851/1448), depicted the formation, decline, and the sources for the revival of Islamic law based on his Ṭabaqāt al-fuqahāʾ al-shāfiʿīyah (The Generations of the Shāfiʿī Jurists).
€106.00$137.00
Paul Powers
This is the first broad study of the treatment of intent in Islamic law, examining ritual, commercial, family, and penal law and providing new insights into Muslim understandings of law, religious ritual, action, agency, and language.
€122.00$158.00
Aharon Layish with a linguistic essay by Alexander Borg
This volume comprising annotated translations of court decisions focuses on the interaction between the sharīʿa and tribal law as reflected in 72 protocols pertaining to personal status, homicide and bodily injury, etc. issued by Libyan sharīʿa courts approximately during the period 1930-1970.
€111.00$144.00
Ze'ev Maghen
This volume focuses on the portions of Muslim purity jurisprudence that deal with matters libidinal -- mulāmasa (the ritual result of contact with the opposite sex) and janāba (ceremonial defilement following cohabitation) -- and examines their implications for the Islamic outlook on sexuality.
€175.00$227.00
Edited by Muhammad Khalid Masud, Rudolph Peters and David Powers
Dispensing Justice is designed to serve as a sourcebook of Islamic judicial practice and qadi judgments from the rise of Islam to modern times, drawing upon court records and qadi court records, in addition to literary sources. The volume fills a large gap in Islamic legal history.
Dispensing ...
€141.00$183.00
Maurits H. van den Boogert
This study sheds new light on the legal position of Westerners and their Ottoman protégés (berātlıs) by investigating the dynamic relations between Islamic judges and foreign consuls in the Ottoman Empire, providing detailed case studies and critical analyses of theory, perception, and practice.
€139.00$180.00
Hiroyuki Yanagihashi
This study, relied mainly on the legal texts and hadith collections dating from the eighth and ninth centuries, provides an illuminating account of how rules regulating various transactions were formed, developped and synthesized in the formative period of Islamic law.
€118.00$153.00
Clark Benner Lombardi
This volume explores the recent decision by Egypt to constitutionalize sharīʿa and analyzes the Egyptian judiciary’s attempts to argue that sharī‘a is consistent with human rights. It will interest anyone studying Islamic law, constitutional thought in the Middle East, or Islam and human rights.
€114.00$148.00
Peter C. Hennigan
This book presents the first sustained analysis of the earliest legal treatises on the Islamic trust, or waqf, and offers a new perspective on Islamic legal culture, the profess of legal legitimation, and the development of law within Ḥanafī hursiprudence.
€114.00$148.00
Boğaç A. Ergene
This book studies the functions and responsibilities of Islamic courts and explores the processes of adjudication and dispute resolution in the context of the late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century Ottoman Anatolia.
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