Islamic softwares

Free Islamic softwares for download

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Islamic Law at ASLH 2025

We invited attendees from the most recent American Society for Legal History's Annual Meeting (ASLH 2025) to report back on panels relevant to Islamic law, and to reflect on the state of the field. Here is what they had to say.  By Omar Abdel-Ghaff…
Read on blog or Reader
Site logo image Islamic Law Blog Read on blog or Reader

Islamic Law at ASLH 2025

February 17, 2026

We invited attendees from the most recent American Society for Legal History's Annual Meeting (ASLH 2025) to report back on panels relevant to Islamic law, and to reflect on the state of the field. Here is what they had to say. 

By Omar Abdel-Ghaffar

The Islamic law presence at this year's American Society for Legal History Annual Meeting in Detroit, Michigan was dispersed across a number of panels rather than concentrated in a single thematic cluster. In total, the program included twelve presentations that engaged Islamic legal history across periods, regions, and methodological approaches. Below, I report on those sessions I attended: one of two panels dedicated to Ottoman legal history alongside three additional presentations that touched on medieval and early modern Islamic law. Taken together, these panels highlight both the growing visibility of Islamic legal history at ASLH and the particular value of the conference as a space for sustained engagement across subfields, regions, and historiographical traditions.

On November 13, I co-convened a "Student Research Colloquium" in which graduate students studying a variety of periods and regions met to present and discuss their works in progress. The richness of discussion between Americanist, Europeanist, Asianist, and Islamic legal historians testifies to the fruits of careful exposition of a topic when combined with a sincere effort to understand a distinct legal experiment. During the Colloquium, Athina Pfeiffer (Princeton University) shared part of her dissertation work, "Law's Allure: Notaries and Legal Practices in the Islamicate Mediterranean (10th–13th century)." Pfeiffer's research is informed by her work at Princeton's Geniza Lab, but incorporates sources from beyond the Geniza to form a compelling image of medieval Islamicate legal practices. Her dissertation examines the social role of Mediterranean notaries as intermediaries between litigants, judges, and documentary practices, foregrounding the notary as a key figure in the everyday operation of the law. Despite being the only Islamic legal historian and one of just two medievalists, she sparked a lively discussion on the legal profession and the characters of the legal drama.

On November 14, Professor Lisa Ford (George Washington University) chaired a panel entitled "Indebted to the State: The Affective and Economic Lives of Imperial Belonging." The panel included four Ottomanists who each discussed various aspects of legal belonging in the late Ottoman period. Lale Can's (City College of New York) contribution, "Convicts and Exiles: Crime, Punishment, and Labor in Late Ottoman History," involved an in-depth study of the late Ottoman administrative practice of resettling useful but problematic officials. In true ASLH fashion, one question that sparked continued discussion came from someone not interested in history at all, but rather a modern lawyer, who asked how these Ottoman practices might help us reflect on our own society's obsession with incarceration. Youssef Ben Ismail (Amherst College), in "Autonomous Subjects: Genealogies of Equality and Difference in the Late Ottoman Empire," traced how competing French and Ottoman legal and administrative discourses in Tunisia produced differentiated forms of imperial subjecthood. Nora Barakat's (Stanford University) paper, "Collective Tax Debt, Class Relations and Belonging in the Late Ottoman Empire," drew on cases from Palestine to show how collective fiscal responsibility structured class relations and status in the late Ottoman Levant. Camille Cole (Illinois State University), in "Debt, Loyalty, and 'Good Subjecthood' in Late Ottoman Basra," examined how financial obligation became a measure of loyalty in Basra and Kuwait. Taken together, the papers situated debt not merely as an economic condition but as a legal and affective mechanism through which imperial belonging was defined and contested.

At a later panel on "Legal Records as Artifacts: Considering the Material Turn in Legal History," Pfeiffer presented "Paper Trails and Debt Tales: The Notary's Craft in Medieval Egypt" alongside Tobias Scheunchen's (Yale Law School) "Seals, Witness Attestations, and Illiteracy: Validating Arabic Legal Documents in an Age of Judicial Expansion." Their presentations were bookended by two others, Lilla Attar's study of ancient Greek law and James Barry's study of the first Chief Justice of Newfoundland's proposed penal chart. The ensuing discussion was a fascinating exchange on the relationship between writing and the law: how expectations are inscribed and what inscription does to assertions of right. The issue of the intertemporality of writing, that is, challenges arising from a piece being written at one point in time and then read at another, pervaded the question-and-answer session.

* * *

The ASLH Annual Meeting's ability to interface with others across fields is particularly useful to the student of Islamic law. Historians of non-Islamic periods and regions can better understand what is distinct about their own periods' experiences through understanding—albeit superficially—the debates taking place within Islamic legal history. Likewise, students of Islamic history can better understand what about Islamic legal procedure for example is particularly Islamic, and which practices simply reflect how courtrooms work. As we are increasingly siloed into regions and time periods, ASLH is a rare opportunity for us to encounter other legal historians and to explore what through-lines connect the experience of the law across time and space—and what makes each legal experiment unique.

 

 

Comment

Islamic Law Blog © 2026.
Unsubscribe or manage your email subscriptions.

WordPress.com and Jetpack Logos

Get the Jetpack app

Subscribe, bookmark, and get real‑time notifications - all from one app!

Download Jetpack on Google Play Download Jetpack from the App Store
WordPress.com Logo and Wordmark title=

Automattic, Inc.
60 29th St. #343, San Francisco, CA 94110

Posted by Samir at 11:01 AM No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

Ramadan Mubarak: Step Into a Month of Mercy, Forgiveness, and Renewal

Ramadan begins, and the world pauses to feel, reflect, and reconnect—hearts stir with hope, anticipation, and the quiet magic of this holy month.
IslamiCity Newsletter
Newsletter
DONATE
Here are our picks for this week.
"Say, ˹O Prophet,˺ “This ˹Quran˺ has been revealed by the One Who knows the secrets of the heavens and the earth. Surely He is All-Forgiving, Most Merciful.”"
(Quran Al-Furqan 25:6)
"Say, ˹O Prophet,˺ “This ˹Quran˺ has been revealed by the One Who knows the secrets of the heavens and the earth. Surely He is All-Forgiving, Most Merciful.”"
(Quran Al-Furqan 25:6)
Table of Content
VIDEOS | PODCAST | ARTICLES | ADVICE COLUMN | NEWS AROUND THE WEB | FOOD RECIPES | BAZAR PRODUCTS |

VIDEOS

IslamiCity News in 60 | Weekly Recap for February
Catch up on all the major headlines and stories from February 09-13!
More arrow
How People Will Be Deceived by Dajjal Without Realizing!
Throughout history, false promises of salvation have appeared, culminating in the Islamic prophecy of the ultimate deceiver.
More arrow
Why Ramadan Starts on Different Weekdays
Why do Ramadan and Eid begin on different days? The answer lies where astronomy meets human tradition.
More arrow

⬆️ Back to Top

PODCAST

Forgiveness as a Strategic Reset: Stepping Into Ramadan Ready - Ramadan Reset - Episode 4
Forgiveness as a Strategic Reset: Stepping Into Ramadan Ready - Ramadan Reset - Episode 4
Ramadan is here, inviting us to open our hearts and embrace forgiveness.
More arrow

⬆️ Back to Top

ARTICLES

Ramadan Mubarak: Step Into a Month of Mercy, Forgiveness, and Renewal
Ramadan Mubarak: Step Into a Month of Mercy, Forgiveness, and Renewal
Ramadan begins, and the world pauses to feel, reflect, and reconnect—hearts stir with hope, anticipation, and the quiet magic of this holy month.
More arrow
Tawhid Holiness Linked to Kaab'a and Temple Mount
11,000 years ago, long before Stonehenge, humans built Göbekli Tepe—a monumental temple of massive stone pillars in southeastern Turkey, still shrouded in mystery.
More arrow
Qur'an: Belief As A Rational Wager
The Qur'an speaks to skeptics too, answering doubt with reason, nature, and moral insight.
More arrow

⬆️ Back to Top

ADVICE COLUMN

Fasting Exemption for a Chronic Illness
Fasting Exemption for a Chronic Illness
More arrow

⬆️ Back to Top

NEWS AROUND THE WEB

UN accuses paramilitary RSF of committing war crimes in Sudan's el-Fasher
More arrow
More than 5,000 ISIL detainees transferred from Syria, says Iraqi ministry
More arrow
Are African 'water wars' on the horizon as AU puts the issue on its agenda?
More arrow
Mass burial for dozens of Palestinians who couldn't be identified
More arrow

⬆️ Back to Top

FOOD RECIPES

Strawberry Dreams: Your 5-Minute Italian Tiramisu Delight!
Strawberry Dreams: Your 5-Minute Italian Tiramisu Delight!
Creamy Italian strawberry tiramisu in 5 minutes — no oven, all indulgence.
More arrow

⬆️ Back to Top

BAZAR PRODUCTS

Premium Branched Deglet Noor Dates -Algeria
Premium Branched Deglet Noor Dates -Algeria
This year Fresh crop From " Tolga" region of Algeria desert to your Ramadan plate.
More arrow
Sakoon 5 in 1 Stress Relief Gummies
Relax, reset, and recharge — delicious gummies that support stress relief, sleep, and focus in one daily bite.
More arrow
Zoha Baccarat Noir Perfume for Men and Women
Warm amber, spice, and wood — a clean, alcohol-free perfume oil that delivers bold luxury with every drop.
More arrow

⬆️ Back to Top

~donate~
Fackbook Twitter Bulletin
IslamiCity Newsletter

IslamiCity | 4022 Huron Ave, Culver City, CA 90232

Our Privacy Policy  |  Archive |  FAQ  |  Contact Us
IslamiCity | 4022 Huron Ave, Culver City, CA 90232
Unsubscribe
Update Profile | Our Privacy Policy | Constant Contact Data Notice
Sent by newsletter@islamicity.org
Posted by Samir at 6:10 AM No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Comments (Atom)

All softwares:

*Al_Qari Plus 2.0
*Quran Auto Reciter
*Quran with Tajweed Software
*Memorize Surah Yasin By Heart
*Azan Times for Worldwide Prayers
*Mobile Qiblah Sun For Cell Phones
*iSubha: Islamic Prayer Beads
*iEat Halal
Powered by Blogger.