This book explores the ways in which Muslim communities across the Indian Ocean world produced and shaped Islamic law and its texts, ideas and practices in their local, regional, imperial, national, and transregional contexts.
This book explores the ways in which Muslim communities across the Indian Ocean world produced and shaped Islamic law and its texts, ideas and practices in their local, regional, imperial, national, and transregional contexts.
Mahmood Kooria is affiliated with Leiden University, the Netherlands, and Ashoka University, India. He read his PhD at the Leiden University Institute for History in 2016 and is the author of Islamic Law in Circulation: Sh¿fi¿¿ Texts across the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean (forthcoming) and co-editor of Malabar in the Indian Ocean World (2018). Sanne Ravensbergen is a cultural historian of law and colonialism. She is a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for History at Leiden University, the Netherlands. Her research focuses on mixed courts and the material culture of law making in nineteenth and twentieth century Indonesia.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. The Formation of Islamic Law in the Indian Ocean Littoral, c. 615-1000 CE 2. Legal Diglossia, Lexical Borrowing and Mixed Judicial Systems in Early Islamic Java and Sumatra 3. Borrowing Adat and Adopting Islam: The Mandarese Records on the Creation and Islamization of Adat in West Sulawesi 4. Shar a Translated? Persian Documents in English Courts 5. Possibilities and pitfalls of cosmopolitanism: Two treaties from northern Somalia in the late nineteenth century 6. Islamic Legal Crossings and Debates in Cambodia: Evidence from fat w and French Colonial Archives in the Early 20th Century 7. The Interplay of Two Shar a Penal Codes: A Case from Gayo Society, Indonesia 8. Post-colonial Nostalgia, Conspiracy Theories and Uneasy Quiescence: Muslim Newspaper Commentary on the Debate on Kadhis' Courts in Contemporary Tanzania
Introduction 1. The Formation of Islamic Law in the Indian Ocean Littoral, c. 615-1000 CE 2. Legal Diglossia, Lexical Borrowing and Mixed Judicial Systems in Early Islamic Java and Sumatra 3. Borrowing Adat and Adopting Islam: The Mandarese Records on the Creation and Islamization of Adat in West Sulawesi 4. Shar a Translated? Persian Documents in English Courts 5. Possibilities and pitfalls of cosmopolitanism: Two treaties from northern Somalia in the late nineteenth century 6. Islamic Legal Crossings and Debates in Cambodia: Evidence from fat w and French Colonial Archives in the Early 20th Century 7. The Interplay of Two Shar a Penal Codes: A Case from Gayo Society, Indonesia 8. Post-colonial Nostalgia, Conspiracy Theories and Uneasy Quiescence: Muslim Newspaper Commentary on the Debate on Kadhis' Courts in Contemporary Tanzania
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