China and Islam : the prophet, the party, and law / Matthew S. Erie, University of Oxford.
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TextSeries: Cambridge studies in law and societyPublisher: New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2016Description: xvii, 447 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781107053373 (hardback)Subject(s): Islamic law -- China | Law -- ChinaDDC classification: 342.5108/5297 LOC classification: KBP69.C5 | E75 2016| Item type | Current location | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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NUST Law School (NLS) | NUST Law School (NLS) | Chinese Studies | 342.5108/5297 ERI (Browse shelf) | Checked out | 04/11/2021 | CL-21 |
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| 341.2 SHA Commonwealth : inter- and non-state contributions to global governance / | 341.2323 LUC UN Security Council : practice and promise / | 341.4480916472 SOU The South China Sea : from a regional maritime dispute to geo-strategic competition | 342.5108/5297 ERI China and Islam : | 343.5491092 ARI Energy law in Pakistan / | 344.5101 BRO Understanding labor and employment law in China / | 346.07 DAN Chinese Business Law / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 370-435 and index).
Machine generated contents note: Introduction: the Party-State enters the mosque; 1. History, the Chinese state, and Islamic law; 2. Linxia at the crossroads; 3. Ritual lawfare; 4. Learning the law; 5. Wedding laws; 6. Moral economies; 7. Procedural justice; Conclusion: law, minjian, and the ends of anthropology.
"China and Islam examines the intersection of two critical issues of the contemporary world: Islamic revival and an assertive China, questioning the assumption that Islamic law is incompatible with state law. It finds that both Hui and the Party-State invoke, interpret, and make arguments based on Islamic law, a minjian (unofficial) law in China, to pursue their respective visions of 'the good'. Based on fieldwork in Linxia, 'China's Little Mecca', this study follows Hui clerics, youthful translators on the 'New Silk Road', female educators who reform traditional madrasas, and Party cadres as they reconcile Islamic and socialist laws in the course of the everyday. The first study of Islamic law in China and one of the first ethnographic accounts of law in postsocialist China, China and Islam unsettles unidimensional perceptions of extremist Islam and authoritarian China through Hui minjian practices of law"-- Provided by publisher.

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