Abstract

Despite a profusion of literature, efforts to develop Islamic economicsas a discipline have not brought about anticipated results.This paper argues that it is the absence of clarity on what wouldmake economics “Islamic” which impedes the development ofIslamic economics. To fill that absence, this paper proposes threeconditions under which an economics can be considered “Islamic”,and then defines the scope of Islamic economics and its methods.Finally, this paper suggests three implications which, takentogether, entail that developing Islamic economics and buildingits body of knowledge is less complicated than was feared. *This article was first published in the American Journal of Islam and Society 37, no. 1-2 (2020):103-122

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