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Authority, Continuity and Change in Islamic Law

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First Sentence
"A juristic typology is a form of discourse that reduces the community of legal specialists into manageable, formal categories, taking into consideration the entire historical and synchronic range of that community's juristic activities and functions."
269 pages
~4h 29min to read
Published 2001 Cambridge University Press 1 views
ISBN
0521023939, 9780521023931
Editions
Paperback
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Description

Publisher Description (unedited publisher data) Wael B. Hallaq is regarded as one of the leading scholars in the field of Islamic law. In a path breaking new book, the author shows how authority guaranteed both continuity and change in Islamic law. While the role of the law schools in augmenting these processes was of the essence, the author demonstrates that it was the construction of the absolutist authority of the school founder, an image which he suggests was actually developed later in history, that maintained the foundations of school methodology and hermeneutics. The defence of that methodology gave rise to an infinite variety of individual legal opinions, ultimately accommodating changes in the law. Thus the author concludes that the mechanisms of change were embedded in the very structure of Islamic law, despite its essentially conservative nature. This book will be welcomed by specialists and scholars in Islamic law for its rigor and innovation. Library of Congress subject headings for this publication: Islamic law, Authority Religious aspects Islam.

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