The question of the universality of the protection of rights has been an area of debate on different levels. This article will begin with a comparative reading of parallel debates on inclusion and universality in the scholarships of jurisprudence, Human Rights, and the Islamic legal tradition, represented by the classical positions of the major Sunni schools of law. By surveying examples of classical legal primary texts of Islamic law, the divergence on the inviolability of all human beings and the two different stands towards the legal protection of the non-Muslims is explored. Rationales will be classified for the inviolability of all human beings in Islamic law,a position represented by the Universalistic school. The article will arrive ...
In Religious Liberty in Western and Islamic Law: Toward a World Legal Tradition, Kristine Kalanges a...
This book compares Islamic and Western ideas of human rights in order to ascertain which human right...
This book explores whether or not international human rights and Islamic law are compatible. It asks...
The question of the universality of the protection of rights has been an area of debate on different...
In this article it is argued that the cleavage in modern legal discourse between the advocates of un...
A legal maxim in Islamic law states that “The right to inviolability (‘isma) is due for humanity (ad...
The world is anxious today to know how Muslims would treat the Other. But ironically, at the height ...
From a comparative perspective, this article analyses the doctrinal debate that arose in Sunni and S...
I am therefore I have rights,” argues this paper. Mere existence qualifies a human being for univers...
Human rights in Islam - the ascendancy of community rights over individual rights in the context of ...
<p>Islamic law has two dimensions at once, namely universality and locality. In contemporary Islamic...
For quite sometimes, there has been an impassioned debate as to whether human rights as encapsulated...
this paper aims at examining the paradox of universality of human rights and trying to bring Western...
Islamic law, also known as Shari’ah law, is one of the most complex and multifaceted, yet easily mis...
The relationship between Islamic Law and other legal systems (basically western type domestic legal ...
In Religious Liberty in Western and Islamic Law: Toward a World Legal Tradition, Kristine Kalanges a...
This book compares Islamic and Western ideas of human rights in order to ascertain which human right...
This book explores whether or not international human rights and Islamic law are compatible. It asks...
The question of the universality of the protection of rights has been an area of debate on different...
In this article it is argued that the cleavage in modern legal discourse between the advocates of un...
A legal maxim in Islamic law states that “The right to inviolability (‘isma) is due for humanity (ad...
The world is anxious today to know how Muslims would treat the Other. But ironically, at the height ...
From a comparative perspective, this article analyses the doctrinal debate that arose in Sunni and S...
I am therefore I have rights,” argues this paper. Mere existence qualifies a human being for univers...
Human rights in Islam - the ascendancy of community rights over individual rights in the context of ...
<p>Islamic law has two dimensions at once, namely universality and locality. In contemporary Islamic...
For quite sometimes, there has been an impassioned debate as to whether human rights as encapsulated...
this paper aims at examining the paradox of universality of human rights and trying to bring Western...
Islamic law, also known as Shari’ah law, is one of the most complex and multifaceted, yet easily mis...
The relationship between Islamic Law and other legal systems (basically western type domestic legal ...
In Religious Liberty in Western and Islamic Law: Toward a World Legal Tradition, Kristine Kalanges a...
This book compares Islamic and Western ideas of human rights in order to ascertain which human right...
This book explores whether or not international human rights and Islamic law are compatible. It asks...