Description
Islamic Law and Civil Code is an extraordinary book by a remarkable man. It is a welcome event for those studying or working in fields requiring an understanding of Islamic and Middle Eastern law relating to landed property. For those doing business in current-day Egypt, Arab societies, and Muslim countries, and for scholars working on social, economic, and cultural issues rooted in the Islamic sphere, this work is indispensable. Richard A. Debs combines the theoretical with the evolving, practical aspects of a field of law that has been too little studied for its impact on the Egyptian economy and society. He has produced a book of inestimable and lasting value. -- Vartan Gregorian, president, Carnegie Corporation of New York This is more than simply a historical exposition of the law of property in Egypt, a great achievement in itself: it is also a remarkably clear and jargon-free analytical exposition of how Islamic law and civil law have operated together in the Egyptian context and by extension in much of the Muslim world. It is a rare work on Islamic law by a trained lawyer, even rarer in being easily accessible to the non-specialist. The book deserves to be consulted by readers across a broad spectrum, from legal experts to scholars of classical Islam and the modern Middle East. -- Rashid Khalidi, Edward Said Professor of Arab Studies, Columbia University Richard A. Debs has produced a thoughtful and well-researched history of Egyptian property law. I recommend the book to serious historians and all those interested in understanding the role that Islamic religious principles have played in the evolution of the legal treatment of property in Egypt. -- Samuel Hayes, Harvard Business School
About the Author
Richard A. Debs is an advisory director of Morgan Stanley, having been president of Morgan Stanley International and previously a Federal Reserve official. He is chairman emeritus of the American University of Beirut and a trustee of the Institute of International Education, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, the Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies, the Barenboim-Said Foundation, and Carnegie Hall. He is also cochair of the Advisory Board of Columbia University's Middle East Institute and has been decorated by the governments of Saudi Arabia and Lebanon. Frank E. Vogel is is the founding director of the Islamic Legal Studies Program at the Harvard Law School where he taught for twenty years. He is the author of Islamic Law and Legal System: Studies of Saudi Arabia and Islamic Law and Finance: Religion, Risk, and Return. Ridwan Al-Sayyid has been a visiting professor at Harvard University and the University of Chicago and was the director of the Higher Institute for Islamic Studies in Beirut, as well as the director of the Arab Development Institute.
Reviews
(A) fascinating read, and a core addition to community and college library collections focusing on international law. Midwest Book Review This book is a perfect study of the reform of Islamic law in the Muslim world... It will certainly be a useful guide to graduate students and researchers of Islamic law. -- Harun Karcic Symposia Extremely well-written and highly-informative... This is a very welcome addition to the English language Islamic law library. I suspect that those who teach courses on modern Islamic law will quickly place it on their mandatory reading lists. -- Mohammad Fadel Journal of Islamic Studies
Book Information
ISBN 9780231150446
Author Richard A. Debs
Format Hardback
Page Count 216
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press