01218 2200253 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001800097041000800115082001100123084001500134100003800149245008600187250001200273260003200285300002600317500002600343504001700369520051200386650001600898990002500914990002500939INLIS00000000000315720221027021614 a0010-0520003157221027 | | eng  a1-86064-652-2 aeng a340.59 a340.59 ISL0 aIslamic Law : Theory and Practice1 aIslamic Law :bTheory and Practice /cEdited by Robert Gleave and Eugenia Kermeli a2nd Ed. aLondon :bI.B Tauris,c2001 avii, 248 p. ;c21 cm. aIndeks : p. 245 - 248 ap. 232 - 244 aThis book explores the concept of ijtihad, or juristic disgression or the process through which a jurist apprehends God's law and can turn it into a legal ruling and how this has influenced the formulations of law in both Sunni and Shi'i Islam. The subject is viewed from a historical as well as a theoretical angel. It contains four sections dealing with legal theory, fatwas and muftis in classical Islamic law, the position of religous minorities under Islamic law and modern developments in Islamic law. 4aHukum Islam a09706/MKRI-P/XI-2008 a09706/MKRI-P/XI-2008