This Article focuses on qadis and courts before modern legal reforms with particular emphasis on the life of women and their interaction with the courts. A number of issues will be discussed and points made pertaining to the laws and madhahib [Islamic legal schools] applied in courts, the hierarchies and roles of qadis, and the accessibility of the legal system and knowledge of court procedures to the general public. Court culture, personnel, and record-keeping will also be discussed, as will the philosophy behind the law. The author hopes to illustrate that a viable court system existed before modernization. Although precedent played an important role, and qadis had certain rules to follow, the court system was nonetheless linked to societ...
This paper undertakes a praxiological study (practice based approach) of Muslim “religious tribunals...
This article is a review of a book that presents a detailed and thorough analysis of women’s legal s...
The patriarchal culture among the people is still prone to occur. Some communities still have a tend...
This Article focuses on qadis and courts before modern legal reforms with particular emphasis on the...
This Article focuses on issues of Islamic discrimination against women and asks how centuries of leg...
In discussing personal status codes, the article focuses on three specific issues: the right of a wo...
International audienceIn this article, I examine the appearance of Muslim women before the judge dur...
The appointment of women as judges in Muslim countries remains a challenging and debatable issue du...
This article presents evidence that the construction of Islamic law is influenced by women's voices,...
"The present paper deals with the discourse of the rights of Muslim women in the pre- independence p...
Up until the early 1970s the academic study of Islamic family law was largely the privileged terrain...
Drawing on legal and ḥadīth texts from the formative and classical periods of Islamic leg...
This comment engages with the gap between the Qur\u27anic pronouncements and Shari\u27ah requirement...
"In the light of the debates and discussions about giving rights to Muslim women and dispensing of q...
Mirjam Künkler and Eva Nisa, researchers with decades of expertise in Islamic authority and gender, ...
This paper undertakes a praxiological study (practice based approach) of Muslim “religious tribunals...
This article is a review of a book that presents a detailed and thorough analysis of women’s legal s...
The patriarchal culture among the people is still prone to occur. Some communities still have a tend...
This Article focuses on qadis and courts before modern legal reforms with particular emphasis on the...
This Article focuses on issues of Islamic discrimination against women and asks how centuries of leg...
In discussing personal status codes, the article focuses on three specific issues: the right of a wo...
International audienceIn this article, I examine the appearance of Muslim women before the judge dur...
The appointment of women as judges in Muslim countries remains a challenging and debatable issue du...
This article presents evidence that the construction of Islamic law is influenced by women's voices,...
"The present paper deals with the discourse of the rights of Muslim women in the pre- independence p...
Up until the early 1970s the academic study of Islamic family law was largely the privileged terrain...
Drawing on legal and ḥadīth texts from the formative and classical periods of Islamic leg...
This comment engages with the gap between the Qur\u27anic pronouncements and Shari\u27ah requirement...
"In the light of the debates and discussions about giving rights to Muslim women and dispensing of q...
Mirjam Künkler and Eva Nisa, researchers with decades of expertise in Islamic authority and gender, ...
This paper undertakes a praxiological study (practice based approach) of Muslim “religious tribunals...
This article is a review of a book that presents a detailed and thorough analysis of women’s legal s...
The patriarchal culture among the people is still prone to occur. Some communities still have a tend...