The Program in Islamic Law is seeking RAs to subcite articles selected for publication in the Journal of Islamic Law. The subcite will take place on the weekend of March 29-30th. Apply today! https://buff.ly/40OqXwp
Program in Islamic Law at Harvard Law School
Higher Education
Cambridge, MA 3,194 followers
PIL@HLS is dedicated to promoting research and providing resources for the academic study of Islamic law.
About us
The Program in Islamic Law at Harvard Law School is dedicated to promoting research and providing resources for the academic study of Islamic law. We host a suite of projects toward that end: a Portal for organizing the world’s information on Islamic law (SHARIAsource), a set of Publications for cutting-edge scholarship in Islamic legal studies (a book series, occasional papers, and a peer-reviewed journal), and myriad Program events and support for students, fellows, and scholars working in the field of Islamic legal studies. SHARIAsource is a flagship research venture of the Program in Islamic Law at Harvard Law School. Its continuing mission is to organize the world’s information on Islamic law in a way that is accessible and useful. Working with a global team of editors, we provide a platform to house primary sources of Islamic law, organize the people to critically analyze them, and promote research to inform academic and public discourse about Islamic law. Our research portal offers cutting-edge content and context on Islamic law to academics, journalists, and policy makers. Our other programs serve generally interested readers through a blog, newsletter, and special events. SHARIAsource adheres to common principles of academic engagement including attention to diverse perspectives, peer-reviewed analysis, and the free and open exchange of ideas. We are not a religious organization or an advocacy group. SHARIAsource was developed with support from the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, and from the Luce and MacArthur Foundations. SHARIAsource includes sources and scholarly commentary on Islamic law from the earliest periods of Islam to the modern era, covering both Muslim-majority and Muslim-minority contexts.
- Website
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http://pil.law.harvard.edu/
External link for Program in Islamic Law at Harvard Law School
- Industry
- Higher Education
- Company size
- 2-10 employees
- Headquarters
- Cambridge, MA
- Type
- Educational
Locations
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Primary
Harvard Law School
Cambridge, MA 02138, US
Employees at Program in Islamic Law at Harvard Law School
Updates
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New to the Field Guide to Islamic Law Online is the Embodied Imamate: Mapping the Development of the Early Shiʿi Community 700-900 CE project that “aims to propose the first rigorously historical model for how, when and why the Imamate emerged and developed as an institution. Members ImBod team will be assigned particular thematic spheres in order to identify and study the networks, actors, institutions, spaces, objects and processes through which the Imamate was mediated and performed within the Imami Shiʿi community and beyond.” Check it out today! #FieldGuideFridays https://buff.ly/4hpijtw
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There's one week left to apply for the 2025-2026 Senior Fellowship! Apply today! See link for more details. (due Jan. 31, 2025) https://buff.ly/414G8BU
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How effective are modern Islamic financial structures in reconciling the prohibition of ribā with the practical needs of contemporary lending, according to AI? Robert (Robbie) Shepard, a 3L J.D. Candidate at Harvard Law School explores this question. https://buff.ly/4g5Bd7Q
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This figure highlights the number and percentage of canons from our that have been completed by our SHARIAsource Lab this past year. The first row displays the number of canons that have been tagged in our collection of 4,518 canons. The bright red circle reflects the super-category of total number of canons tagged, followed by three sub-categories displaying how many canons have been tagged with categories, legal fields, and legal subfields, respectively. The second row displays the number of canons that have been translated (in blue), transliterated (in yellow), titled (in green), and that have been matched as being related (in purple). Read more about the work underway in the SHARIAsource Lab! https://buff.ly/3VZDlqy
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How have Muslims altered their religious practices in the face of oppression, according to AI? Summar Khan, a 2L at Harvard Law School explores this question! https://buff.ly/3CbIXr0
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New to our Field Guide to Islamic Law Online isnFirdusi (Ferdowsī Magazine), an influential Persian-language weekly publication first issued on July 9, 1949. #FieldGuideFridays https://buff.ly/42g3Ont
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“The Lahore High Court [Pakistan] has ruled that a non-Muslim cannot inherit the property of their Muslim relative under Islamic law.” Read more in our recent roundup. https://buff.ly/4hjtEeQ
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As we kick-off new year, we reflect on the highlights of the past year at the Program in Islamic Law and the SHARIAsource Lab! We’ve brought it all together with a video montage of the year in pictures and a summary of all the progress we made in 2024. https://buff.ly/3PEkDB8
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Why did the founders of these schools—Abū Ḥanīfa, Mālik ibn ’Anas, al-Shāfiʿī, and Ibn Ḥanbal—succeed where others failed, and what does ChatGPT have to say about it? Read this report by John Burden, a second-year JD student at Harvard Law School. https://buff.ly/4gNqtvR