@Book{393698653, title="Dispensing justice in Islam: q{\={a}}dis and their judgements", series="Studies in Islamic law and society 22", year="2006", publisher="Brill", address="Leiden [u.a.]", keywords="Judges (Islamic law); Recht; Geschichte; Tradition; Islamisches Recht; Rechtsprechende Gewalt; Rechtsprechung; Rechtsanwendung; Verwaltungsverfahren; Rechtsstreit; Islamische Staaten", contents="Masud, Muhammad Khalid; Peters, Rudolph; Powers, David S.: Qadis and their courts: an historical survey. - S. 1-44 M{\"u}ller, Christian: Settling litigation without judgment: the importance of a hukm in qadi cases of Mamluk Jerusalem. - S. 47-69 Peirce, Leslie: A new judge for Aintab: the shifting legal environment of a sixteenth-century Ottoman court. - S. 71-93 Stiles, Erin: Broken ``edda'' and marital mistakes: two recent disputes from an Islamic court in Zanzibar. - S. 95-115 Bowen, John R.: Fairness and law in an Indonesian court. - S. 117-141 Dupret, Baudouin: The practice of judging: the Egyptian judiciary at work in a personal status case. - S. 143-168 Johansen, Baber: The constitution and the principles of Islamic normativity against the rules of fiqh: a judgment of the Supreme Constitutional Court of Egypt. - S. 169-193 Messick, Brinkley: Commercial litigation in a Shari'a Court. - S. 195-218 Peters, Rudolph: The re-Islamization of criminal law in Northern Nigeria and the judiciary: the Safiyya", note="ed. by Muhammad Khalid Masud ...", isbn="9004140670", language="English" }