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 110-014 Crime Politics and Law in Islamic Society

Note

Formerly available as 150-209/309. Students who have completed 150-209/309 are not eligible to enrol in this subject.

Availability

2nd and 3rd year

Credit Points

12.5

Coordinator

Dr A Saeed & Dr Richard Pennell

Semester

Not Offered (view timetable)

Contact

A 2-hour lecture and a 1-hour tutorial per week

Subject Description

In recent years calls have been made by the Islamist movement for a truly Islamic society to be restored. The subject explores the three key areas on which the Islamist movement has focused in constructing a just society and contrast them with historical practice: (i) how Islamic law should operate in terms of its effects on women and the family, the economic and banking systems, and the education system: (ii) how the law should be enforced through the political and legal systems and the way in which specific penalties are used to define their Islamic character: (iii) how the law is to be understood and interpreted in modern times on the basis of classical texts. It will explore and analyse why the Islamist movement has emerged, and how and why its discourses have differed in various parts of the Islamic world. It will contextualise this by examining religious law in the Muslim world, the history of this law and its foundation texts, and the practice of law in the precolonial and colonial period. Finally it will look at the altered perspectives within Muslim societies under the pressures of local culture and modernity.

Assessment

Written work totalling 4000 words

Prescribed Texts

A subject reader will be available



Search : Index : Faculty of Arts : Islamic Studies
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Email Enquiries:          Course_Information@registrar.unimelb.edu.au