Islam and Warfare Context and Compatibility with International Law Routledge Research in the Law of Armed Conflict Series
Auteur : Bakircioglu Onder
The question of how Islamic law regulates the notions of just recourse to and just conduct in war has long been the topic of heated controversy, and is often subject to oversimplification in scholarship and journalism. This book traces the rationale for aggression within the Islamic tradition, and assesses the meaning and evolution of the contentious concept of jihad. The book reveals that there has never been a unified position on what Islamic warfare tangibly entails, due to the complexity of relevant sources and discordant historical dynamics that have shaped the contours of jihad.
Onder Bakircioglu advocates a dynamic reading of Islamic law and military tradition; one which prioritises the demands of contemporary international relations and considers the meaning and application of jihad as contingent on the socio-political forces of each historical epoch.
This book will be of great interest to scholars and students of international law, Islamic law, war and security studies, and the law of armed conflict.
1. Main Sources of Islamic Law 2. Islamic Tradition on Warfare 3. Shades of Jihad: Moderate and Radical Interpretations 4. Jihad in the United Nations Era 5. Conclusion
Onder Bakircioglu is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Law at the University of Leicester.
Date de parution : 11-2014
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 11-2016
15.6x23.4 cm
Thèmes d’Islam and Warfare :
Mots-clés :
supra; note; modern; international; law; islamic; religio; political; force; laws; International Law; Public International Law; International Humanitarian Law; Islamic International Law; Military Jihad; Nuclear Disarmament; Law Review; St Thomas Aquinas; Aquinas; Dar Al Ahd; Mazalim Courts; Islamic Warfare; Conclude Peace Treaties; Juristic Preference; Modern International Law; Timeless; Religio Political Force; Dar Al Sulh; Muslim States; UN; Muslim Scholars; Collective Security Measures; Jus Ad Bellum; Non-linear Evolution; Islamic Law