(Source: Brill)
Brill has published a book dealing with the
role of Islam in the history of international law.
ABOUT THE BOOK
International Law and Islam: Historical
Explorations offers a unique opportunity to examine the Islamic contribution to
the development of international law in historical perspective. The role of
Islam in its various intellectual, political and legal manifestations within
the history of international law is part of the exciting intellectual
renovation of international and global legal history in the dawn of the twenty-first
century. The present volume is an invitation to engage with this thriving
development after ‘generations of prejudiced writing’ regarding the notable
contribution of Islam to international law and its history.
ABOUT THE EDITORS
Ignacio de la
Rasilla, Ph.D. (2011) Geneva, is Han Depei Chair
Professor of International Law at Wuhan University, Institute of International
Law. He has published extensively on international law and its history
including In the Shadow of Vitoria (Brill-Nijhoff,
2017). Ayesha Shahid, Ph.D. (2008) University of Warwick, UK, is
Senior Lecturer in Law at Coventry Law School, Coventry University. She has
published extensively on Islamic Law and Human Rights and is the author ofSilent
Voices, Untold Stories (OUP, 2010).
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Ignacio de la Rasilla, Islam and the Global
Turn in the History of International Law
Ignacio de la Rasilla, The Protean Historical
Mirror of International Law
Michelle Burgis-Kasthala, How Should
International Lawyers Study Islamic Law and Its Contribution to International
Law?
Ayesha Shahid, An Exploration of the ‘Global’
History of International Law: Some Perspectives from within the Islamic Legal
Traditions
John D. Haskell, Subjectivity and Structures:
The Challenges of Methodology in the Study of the History of International Law
and Religion
Robert Kolb, The Basis of Obligation in
Treaties of Ancient Cultures – Pactum Est Servandum?
Jean Allain, Khadduri as Gatekeeper of the
Islamic Law of Nations?
Ignacio Forcada Barona, In Search of the Lost
Influence: Islamic Thinkers and the Spanish Origins of International Law
Pierre-Alexandre Cardinal & Frédéric
Mégret, The Other ‘Other’: Moors, International Law and the Origin of the
Colonial Matrix
Luigi Nuzzo, Law, Religion and Power: Texts and
Discourse of Conquest
Ilias Bantekas, Land Rights in
Nineteenth-Century Ottoman State Succession Treaties
Haniff Ahamat & Nizamuddin Alias, The
Evolution of the Personality of the Malay Sultanate States
Matthias Vanhullebusch, On the Abodes of War
and Peace in the Islamic Law of War: Fact or Fiction?
Mohamed Badar, Ahmed Al-Dawoody & Noelle
Higgins, The Origins and Evolution of Islamic Law of Rebellion: Its
Significance to the Current International Humanitarian Law Discourse
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