Abstract

Abstract In the process of modernizing Muslim majority states in the 19th and 20th centuries, Islamic law was often replaced with foreign legal codes. But in many areas of the law, Islamic legal norms were not replaced but rather transformed from an uncodified “jurists’ law” applied by qadis into legal codes applied by sovereign states. This process involved the transformation of not only many aspects of the substance of Islamic law, but also the methods, agents, and epistemologies by which Islamic law is known and enforced. This chapter explores this revolution in Islamic law from the 19th-century Ottoman Tanzimat reforms to the 20th-century national appropriations of Islamic law in a few select areas, particularly family and personal status law.

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