Everyday Islamic law and the making of modern South Asia / Elizabeth Lhost.

"Beginning in the late eighteenth century, British rule transformed the relationship between law, society, and the state in South Asia. But qazis and muftis, alongside ordinary people without formal training in law, fought back as the colonial system in India sidelined Islamic legal experts. Fo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lhost, Elizabeth (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Chapel Hill : The University of North Carolina Press, [2022]
Series:Islamic civilization & Muslim networks.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Life, law, and legal history
  • Rethinking law, religion, and the state
  • Becoming qazi in British Bombay: imperial expansion, legal administration, and everyday negotiation
  • Creating a qazi class: navigating expectations between company and community
  • From petitions to elections: Islamic legal practitioners and the exigencies of colonial rule
  • Crown rule in the context of noninterference
  • Personal law in the public sphere: fatwas, print publics, and the making of everyday Islamic legal discourse
  • From files to fatwas: procedural uniformity and substantive flexibility in alternative legal spaces
  • Accounting for qazis: negotiating life and law in small-town North India
  • Analyzing shariÊ»a, state, and society
  • Of judges and jurists: questioning the courts in Islamic legal discourse
  • Whose law is it, anyway? Navigating legal paths in late colonial society
  • The limits of legal possibilities.