Chapter 1 Introduction: Islamic Law and the Challenges of Modernity Part 2 Modernization and Legal Reforms in the Arab World Chapter 3 Can the Shari'a be Restored? Chapter 4 Inscribing the Islamic Shari'a in Arab Constitutional Law Chapter 5 A Typology of State Muftis Chapter 6 A Contextual Approach to Improving Asylum Law and Practices in the Middle East Part 7 Legal reforms and the Impact on Women Chapter 8 Internationalizing the Conversation on Women's Rights: Arab Countries Face the CEDAW Committee Chapter 9 Tahlil Marriage in Shari'a, Legal Codes, and the Contemporary Fatwa Literature Chapter 10 Egyptian Feminism: Trapped in the Identity Debate Chapter 11 Muslim Women and Legal Reform: The Case of Jordan and Women's Work
Yvonne Yazbeck Haddad is professor of history of Islam and Christian-Muslim relations at the Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding at the Edmund Walsh School of Foreign Serice at Georgetown University. She has taught Middle East history and Islamic studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Hartford Seminary; and Colgate University. She is a past president of the Middle East Studies Association. Haddad's research interest has focused on twentieth-century Islamic thought and Muslims in the West. Her numerous publications include Contemporary Islam and the Challenge of History; Muslim Communities in North America; The Islamic Revival; The Muslims of America; Women, Religion, and Social Change; Muslims on the Americanization Path?; Muslims in the West: From Sojourners to Citizens; and Muslim Minorities in the West: "Visible" and "Invisible." Barbara Freyer Stowasser (Ph.D., Islamic Studies and Semitic Languages, Universitat Munster) is professor of Arabic in the Department of Arabic at Georgetown University. Since 1993, she has served as director of the Center for Contemporary Arab Studies. She served as the 34th president of the Middle East Studies Association (1998-99). Her publications include a book length study on Women in the Qur'an: Traditions and Interpretation (Oxford University Press, 1994), an edited volume entitled The Islamic Impulse (CCAS, 1987), articles published in American, German, Arabic and Turkish journals and periodicals, and book chapters in collected volumes. CCAS recently published Dr. Stowasser's A Time to Reap: Thoughts on Calendars and Millennialism, an exploration of how Islam, Christianity, and Judaism have historically treated periods of apocalyptic imminence.
These essays are a useful contribution to the increasing number of
debates on Islamic law today. . . . the broad spectrum of themes
and the style of writing ensure that scholars from a wide range of
disciplines will be able to absorb the main arguments and perceive
the specific ethical dilemmas in Islamic legal discourse today.
*Journal of the American Academy of Religion*
This compilation of eight research articles on Islamic law by
leading experts, edited by two equally distinguished scholars, is a
timely work that is rich in its analysis, broad in its scope, and
balanced in its approach. The discourse envelops the intricacies,
contradictions, and interpretive controversies of Islamic law as
faced by the modern-day Arab states. It covers the impact of
East-West interaction on Islamic legal codes and Sharia; the
relevance of traditional Islamic customs/rules to present
circumstances; the competence and caliber of Islamic scholars who
are supposed to define and elaborate the practical aspects of law;
and areas of dispute especially in matters of family law and gender
related aspects. The work defines these topics well and provides
excellent citations and sources for further research. The
contributors address the subject from a variety of vantage points
and provide sufficient background on the issues from theoretical
and scholarly as well as historical and political perspectives.
Highly recommended.
*CHOICE*
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