An Introduction to Islamic Law (52 page)

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Authors: Wael B. Hallaq

Tags: #Law, #General, #Jurisprudence, #History, #Middle East, #Religion, #Islam, #International, #Political Science, #Social Science, #Sociology

BOOK: An Introduction to Islamic Law
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CHAPTER 6
 
Gerber
,
Haim
,
State, Society, and Law in Islam: Ottoman Law in Comparative Perspective
(
Albany
:
State University of New York Press
,
1994
).
[3]
Hanna
,
N.
, ed.,
The State and Its Servants: Administration of Egypt from Ottoman Times to the Present
(
Cairo
:
American University in Cairo Press
,
1995
).
[3–4]
nalcık
,
Halil
, “
Suleiman the Lawgiver and Ottoman Law
,”
Archivum Ottomanicum
,
1
(
1969
):
105
–38.
[4]
Mardin
,
Serif
, “
The Just and the Unjust
,”
Daedalus
,
120
, 3 (
1991
):
113
–29.
[2]
Zilfi
,
Madeline C.
,
The Politics of Piety: The Ottoman Ulema in the Postclassical Age (1600–1800)
(
Minneapolis
:
Bibliotheca Islamica
,
1988
).
[3]
CHAPTER 7
 
Anderson
,
Michael R.
, “
Legal Scholarship and the Politics of Islam in British India
,” in
R. S.
Khare
, ed.,
Perspectives on Islamic Law, Justice, and Society
(
Lanham, MD
:
Rowman and Littlefield
,
1999
),
65
–91.
[2]
Christelow
,
Allan
,
Muslim Law Courts and the French Colonial State in Algeria
(
Princeton
:
Princeton University Press
,
1985
).
[3]
Çizakça
,
Murat
,
History of Philanthropic Foundations: The Islamic World from the Seventh Century to the Present
(
Istanbul
:
Bogaziçi University Press
,
2000
).
[2]
Cohn
,
Bernard
,
Colonialism and Its Forms of Knowledge: The British in India
(
Princeton
:
Princeton University Press
,
1996
). Although this important work deals mainly with the non-Muslims of British India, its analysis is equally valid as to the Muslim population there.
[5]
Hooker
,
M. B.
,
Legal Pluralism: An Introduction to Colonial and Neo-Colonial Laws
(
Oxford
:
Clarendon Press
,
1975
).
[4]
Hoyle
,
Mark S. W.
,
The Mixed Courts of Egypt
(
London
:
Graham and Trotman
,
1991
).
[3]
nalcık
,
Halil
, “
Application of the Tanzimat and Its Social Effects
,”
Archivum Ottomanicum
,
5
(
1973
):
97
–127.
[4]
Kugle
,
Scott A.
, “
Framed, Blamed and Renamed: The Recasting of Islamic Jurisprudence in Colonial South Asia
,”
Modern Asian Studies
,
35
, 2 (
2001
):
257
–313.
[3]
Lev
,
Daniel S.
, “
Colonial Law and the Genesis of the Indonesian State
,”
Indonesia
,
40
(October
1985
): 57–74.
[3]
Powers
,
David S.
, “
Orientalism, Colonialism and Legal History: The Attack on Muslim Family Endowments in Algeria and India
,”
Comparative Studies in Society and History
,
31
, 3 (July
1989
):
535
–71.
[1]
Singha
,
Radhika
,
A Despotism of Law: Crime and Justice in Early Colonial India
(
Delhi and New York
:
Oxford University Press
,
1998
).
[5]
Strawson
,
John
, “
Islamic Law and English Texts
,”
Law and Critique
,
6
, 1 (
1995
):
21
–38.
[2]
CHAPTER 8
 
An-Na’im
,
Abdullahi
,
Islamic Family Law in a Changing World
(
London
:
Zed Books
,
2002
).
[1–3]
Anderson
,
J. N. D.
,
Law Reform in the Muslim World
(
London
:
Athlone Press
,
1976
).
[2]
Asad
,
Talal
,
“Conscripts of Western Civilization,”
in
Christine W.
Gailey
, ed.,
Civilization in Crisis: Anthropological Perspectives
(
Gainsville
:
University Press of Florida
,
1992
),
333
–51.
[3]
Asad
,
Talal
,
Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity
(
Stanford
:
Stanford University Press
,
2003
).
[5]
Barnes
,
J. R.
,
An Introduction to the Religious Foundations in the Ottoman Empire
(
Leiden
:
E. J. Brill
,
1986
).
[2]
Buskens
,
L.
,
“Islamic Commentaries and French Codes: The Confrontation and Accommodation of Two Forms of Textualization of Family Law in Morocco,”
in
H.
Driessen
, ed.,
The Politics of Ethnographic Reading and Writing: Confrontations of Western and Indigenous Views
(
Saarbrücken
:
Breitenbach
,
1993
),
65
–100.
[3]
Carroll
,
Lucy
,
“Orphaned Grandchildren in Islamic Law of Succession: Reform and Islamization in Pakistan,”
Islamic Law and Society
,
5
, 3 (
1998
):
409
–47.
[3]
Carroll
,
Lucy
,
“The Pakistan Federal Shariat Court, Section 4 of the Muslim Family Laws Ordinance, and the Orphaned Grandchild,”
Islamic Law and Society
,
9
, 1 (
2002
):
70
–82.
[3]
Hélie-Lucas
,
Marie-Aimée
,
“The Preferential Symbol for Islamic Identity: Women in Muslim Personal Laws,”
in
Valentine M.
Moghadam
, ed.,
Identity Politics and Women: Cultural Reassertions and Feminisms in International Perspective
(
Boulder, CO
:
Westview Press
,
1994
),
188
–96.
[4]
Lev
,
Daniel S.
,
Islamic Courts in Indonesia: A Study in the Political Bases of Legal Institutions
(
Berkeley
:
University of California Press
,
1972
).
[3]
Lev
,
Daniel S.
,
“Judicial Unification in Post-Colonial Indonesia,”
Indonesia
,
16
(October,
1973
):
1
–37.
[4]
Lombardi
,
Clark B.
,
State Law as Islamic Law: The Incorporation of the Shari
a into Egyptian Constitutional Law
(
Leiden
:
Brill
,
2006
).
[3]
Moors
,
Annelies
, “
Debating Islamic Family Law: Legal Texts and Social Practices
,” in
M. L.
Meriwether
and
Judith E.
Tucker
, eds.,
Social History of Women and Gender in the Modern Middle East
(
Boulder, CO and Oxford
:
Westview Press
,
1999
),
141
–75.
[2]
Peletz
,
Michael G.
,
Islamic Modern: Religious Courts and Cultural Politics in Malaysia
(
Princeton
:
Princeton University Press
,
2002
).
[3]
Tucker
,
Judith E.
,
“Revisiting Reform: Women and the Ottoman Law of Family Rights, 1917,”
Arab Studies Journal
,
4
, 2 (
1996
):
4
–17.
[2]

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