AIM, SCOPE, AND FOCUS
Aim
To serve as a scholarly platform that critically examines how Islamic constitutional law interacts with, shapes and is reshaped by contemporary political-legal transformation processes, thereby advancing both theoretical understanding and practical guidance for Muslim and non-Muslim jurisdictions.
To serve as a scholarly platform that critically examines how Islamic constitutional law interacts with, shapes and is reshaped by contemporary political-legal transformation processes, thereby advancing both theoretical understanding and practical guidance for Muslim and non-Muslim jurisdictions.
Scope
The journal covers comparative constitutional studies, fiqh-oriented public-law reasoning, maqāṣid-based policy analysis, legislative drafting, judicial review, human-rights adjudication, democratization, gender justice, minority protection, economic governance, digital regulation and transnational legal pluralism in Muslim-majority and minority states, as well as international organizations that engage Islamic legal discourse.
The journal covers comparative constitutional studies, fiqh-oriented public-law reasoning, maqāṣid-based policy analysis, legislative drafting, judicial review, human-rights adjudication, democratization, gender justice, minority protection, economic governance, digital regulation and transnational legal pluralism in Muslim-majority and minority states, as well as international organizations that engage Islamic legal discourse.
Focus
Empirical and normative investigations into the mechanisms through which Islamic legal norms are constitutionalized, codified, interpreted or contested within modern state structures, and the reciprocal ways in which global constitutionalism, secular governance models and socio-political reform movements transform the substance, procedure and institutional design of Islamic constitutional law.
Empirical and normative investigations into the mechanisms through which Islamic legal norms are constitutionalized, codified, interpreted or contested within modern state structures, and the reciprocal ways in which global constitutionalism, secular governance models and socio-political reform movements transform the substance, procedure and institutional design of Islamic constitutional law.
