Publications of Ebrahim Moosa
%% Books
@book{fds43342,
Title = {Ghazali and the Poetics of Imagination},
Number = {i-ix; 349},
Publisher = {University of North Carolina Press},
Year = {2005},
Month = {Spring},
url = {http://uncpress.unc.edu/chapters/moosa_ghazali.html},
Keywords = {Ghazali • Muslim ethics • Islamic ethics •
theology • dihliz},
Abstract = {http://uncpress.unc.edu/chapters/moosa_ghazali.html},
Key = {fds43342}
}
%% Edited Books
@misc{fds211131,
Author = {E. Moosa and Jeffrey T. Kenney and Ebrahim Moosa},
Title = {Modern Islam: A Textbook},
Year = {2013},
Month = {July},
Abstract = {A textbook on modern Islam with Routledge
published},
Key = {fds211131}
}
@misc{fds222257,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Abū Ḥāmid al-Ghazālī (d. 505/1111)},
Pages = {261-293},
Booktitle = {Islamic Legal Thought A Compendium of Muslim
Jurists},
Publisher = {Brill},
Editor = {Oussama Arabi and David S. Powers and Susan A.
Spectorsky},
Year = {2013},
ISBN = {978-90-04-25452-7},
url = {https://www.academia.edu/4964816/Abu_Hamid_al-Ghazali_in_Islamic_Legal_Thought_A_Compendium_of_Muslim_Jurists_Edited_by_Oussama_Arabi_David_S._Powers_and_Susan_A._Spectorsky},
Keywords = {islamic law, Ghazali studies, fiqh},
Key = {fds222257}
}
@misc{fds173990,
Author = {Shamil Jeppie and Ebrahim Moosa and Richard Roberts},
Title = {Muslim Family Law in Sub-Saharan Africa: Colonial Legacies
and Post-Colonial Challenges},
Pages = {388},
Publisher = {Amsterdam University Press},
Year = {2010},
ISBN = {9789089641724},
url = {http://www.aup.nl/do.php?a=show_visitor_book&isbn=9789089641724},
Keywords = {Islamic law, family law; Sub-Saharan Africa; law
reform},
Abstract = {Shamil Jeppie, Ebrahim Moosa, Richard Roberts Muslim Family
Law in Sub-Saharan Africa Colonial Legacies and
Post-Colonial Challenges Muslim Family Law in Sub-Saharan
Africa: Colonial Legacies and Post-Colonial Challenges
offers comparative historical, anthropological and legal
perspectives on the ways in which French and British
colonial administrations interacted with the diversity of
Islamic legal schools, scholars, and practices in Africa.
The authors examine how the colonial impress marks Islamic
legal practices in Africa and its impact on the
post-colonial and contemporary periods. Several chapters
document the experiences of Muslim citizens in some African
states in their bid to have Islamic law, particularly family
law, recognized. A substantial introduction sets the
individual essays in a comparative framework of Islamic
legal scholarship in an era of colonialism by contrasting
and comparing vital questions as they occur in the African
context. Shamil Jeppie is associate professor in the
Department of Historical Studies, University of Cape Town.
Ebrahim Moosa is associate professor in the Department of
Religion, Duke University. Richard Roberts is professor in
the Department of History, Stanford University.
http://www.aup.nl/do.php?a=show_visitor_book&isbn=9789089641724},
Key = {fds173990}
}
@misc{fds13017,
Author = {Fazlur Rahman and Ebrahim Moosa},
Title = {Revival and Reform: A Study of Islamic Fundementalism},
Publisher = {Oxford: Oneworld},
Year = {1999},
Key = {fds13017}
}
%% Papers Published
@article{fds222258,
Author = {AASIM I. PADELA and STEVEN W. FURBER and MOHAMMAD A. KHOLWADIA AND
EBRAHIM MOOSA},
Title = {DIRE NECESSITY AND TRANSFORMATION: ENTRY-POINTS FOR MODERN
SCIENCE IN ISLAMIC BIOETHICAL ASSESSMENT OF PORCINE PRODUCTS
IN VACCINES},
Journal = {Bioethics},
Year = {2013},
ISSN = {0269-9702},
Abstract = {The field of medicine provides an important window through
which to examine the encounters between religion and
science, and between modernity and tradition. While both
religion and science consider health to be a ‘good’ that
is to be preserved, and promoted, religious and science
based teachings may differ in their conception of what
constitutes good health, and how that health is to be
achieved. This paper analyzes the way the Islamic
ethico-legal tradition assesses the permissibility of using
vaccines that contain porcine-derived components by
referencing opinions of several Islamic authorities. In the
Islamic ethico-legal tradition controversy surrounds the use
of proteins from an animal (pig) that is considered to be
impure by Islamic law. As we discuss the Islamic
ethico-legal constructs used to argue for or against the use
of porcine-based vaccines we will call attention to areas
where modern medical data may make the arguments more
precise. By highlighting areas where science can buttress
and clarify the ethico-legal arguments we hope to spur an
enhanced applied Islamic bioethics discourse where religious
scholars and medical experts use modern science in a way
that remains faithful to the epistemology of Islamic ethics
to clarify what Islam requires of Muslim patients and
healthcare workers.},
Doi = {10.1111/bioe.12016},
Key = {fds222258}
}
@article{fds199308,
Author = {E. Moosa and Aasim I. Padela and Ahsan Arozullah},
Title = {Brain Death in Islamic Ethico-Legal Deliberation: Challenges
for Applied Islamic Bioethics},
Journal = {Bioethics},
Publisher = {Blackwell},
Year = {2011},
Month = {December},
ISSN = {1467-8519},
url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com.proxy.lib.duke.edu/doi/10.1111/j.1467-8519.2011.01935.x/pdf},
Keywords = {bioethics • brain death • Muslim ethics •
Islamic ethics},
Abstract = {Since the 1980s, Islamic scholars and medical experts have
used the tools of Islamic law to formulate ethico-legal
opinions on brain death. These assessments have varied in
their determinations and remain controversial. Some
juridical councils such as the Organization of Islamic
Conferences' Islamic Fiqh Academy (OIC-IFA) equate brain
death with cardiopulmonary death, while others such as the
Islamic Organization of Medical Sciences (IOMS) analogize
brain death to an intermediate state between life and death.
Still other councils have repudiated the notion entirely.
Similarly, the ethico-legal assessments are not uniform in
their acceptance of brain-stem or whole-brain criteria for
death, and consequently their conceptualizations of, brain
death. Within the medical literature, and in the statements
of Muslim medical professional societies, brain death has
been viewed as sanctioned by Islamic law with experts citing
the aforementioned rulings. Furthermore, health policies
around organ transplantation and end-of-life care within the
Muslim world have been crafted with consideration of these
representative religious determinations made by
transnational, legally-inclusive, and multidisciplinary
councils. The determinations of these councils also have
bearing upon Muslim clinicians and patients who encounter
the challenges of brain death at the bedside. For those
searching for ‘Islamically-sanctioned’ responses that
can inform their practice, both the OIC-IFA and IOMS
verdicts have palpable gaps in their assessments and remain
clinically ambiguous. In this paper we analyze these
verdicts from the perspective of applied Islamic bioethics
and raise several questions that, if answered by future
juridical councils, will better meet the needs of clinicians
and bioethicists.},
Doi = {:10.1111/j.1467-8519.2011.01935.x},
Key = {fds199308}
}
@article{fds196566,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Aesthetics and Transcendence in the Arab
Uprisings},
Journal = {Middle East Law and Governance},
Volume = {4},
Number = {3},
Pages = {171-180},
Publisher = {Brill},
Year = {2011},
Month = {October},
url = {http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/brill/melg/2011/00000003/F0020001/art00016},
Abstract = {Politics is regarded as a science for it tells us what to
do, when it deals with measurable concepts. But politics is
also an art—a form of practice, telling us how and when to
do things. Lest we forget, the arts of persuasion and
inspiration are part of politics. And, every art also
produces an aesthetic. By aesthetics I mean, the ways by
which we think about art: recall, art is what we do and how
we do things. Th ose things and acts that become visible
when we do and produce certain actions—jubilation,
conversations, speeches, greetings, protests, banners,
deaths, wounds and other expressions—all constitute the
means by which thought becomes visible, effective, and
sensible. These forms and visible expressions of the
sensible constitute the aesthetics of politics. Only the
patient will know where the momentum for change in the Arab
world is heading. But, if the outcome of the Arab uprisings
is unclear, then there is one certainty: the people have
changed the order of the sensible. Thanks to peaceful
protests in the face of regime brutality, tens of millions
of people have performed change in myriads of expressions:
aesthetics. Their feelings have cumulatively changed, and
how people feel about governance is ultimately what politics
is all about.},
Doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187633711X591512},
Key = {fds196566}
}
@article{fds140670,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Response to Robert Segal},
Journal = {Journal of the American Academy of Religion},
Volume = {74},
Number = {1},
Pages = {172-174},
Year = {2007},
Key = {fds140670}
}
@article{fds140668,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Contrapuntal Readings in Muslim Thought: Translations and
Transitions},
Journal = {Journal of the American Academy of Religion},
Volume = {74},
Number = {1},
Pages = {107-118},
Year = {2006},
Key = {fds140668}
}
@article{fds140669,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Rejoinder to Paul J. Griffiths’ Response},
Journal = {Journal of the American Academy of Religion},
Volume = {74},
Number = {1},
Pages = {122-124},
Year = {2006},
Key = {fds140669}
}
@article{fds12753,
Title = {The Poetics and Politics of Law after Empire: Reading
Women's Rights in the Contestations of Law},
Journal = {Journal for Islamic and Near Eastern Law
(JINEL)},
Volume = {1},
Number = {1},
Pages = {1-46},
Publisher = {UCLA Law School},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds12753}
}
@article{fds12754,
Title = {The Dilemma of Islamic Rights Schemes},
Journal = {The Journal of Law and Religion},
Volume = {xv},
Number = {1-2},
Pages = {185-215},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds12754}
}
@article{fds12759,
Title = {Interface of Science and Jurisprudence: Dissonant Gazes at
the Body of Modern Muslim Ethics},
Pages = {329-356},
Booktitle = {God, Life and the Cosmos: Christian and Islamic
Perspectives},
Publisher = {Aldershot: Ashgate},
Editor = {Ted Peters and Muzzaffar Iqbal and Syed Nomanul
Haq},
Year = {2002},
Key = {fds12759}
}
@article{fds43373,
Title = {Languages of Change in Islamic Law: Redefining Death in
Modernity},
Journal = {Islamic Studies},
Volume = {38},
Number = {3},
Pages = {305-342},
Year = {1999},
Key = {fds43373}
}
@article{fds43372,
Title = {Allegory of the Rule (Hukm): Law As Simulacrum in
Islam},
Journal = {History of Religions},
Volume = {38},
Number = {1},
Pages = {1-24},
Year = {1998},
Month = {August},
Key = {fds43372}
}
@article{fds43369,
Title = {Shaykh Ahmad Shakir and the Adoption of a
Scientifically-Based Lunar Calendar},
Journal = {Islamic Law & Society},
Volume = {5},
Number = {1-2},
Pages = {57-89},
Year = {1998},
Key = {fds43369}
}
@article{fds43370,
Title = {The Sufaha in Qur’an Literature: A Problem in
Semiosis},
Journal = {Der Islam},
Volume = {75},
Number = {2},
Pages = {1-27},
Year = {1998},
Key = {fds43370}
}
@article{fds10683,
Title = {Worlds ‘Apart’:The Tabligh Jamat under Apartheid
1963-1993},
Journal = {Journal for Islamic Studies},
Volume = {17},
Pages = {28-48},
Year = {1997},
Key = {fds10683}
}
%% Articles in a Collection
@article{fds211128,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Post 9/11: America Agonizes over Islam},
Volume = {3},
Pages = {553-574},
Booktitle = {The Cambridge History of Religions in America: Religions in
America 1945 to the present},
Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
Address = {New York},
Editor = {Stephen J. Stein},
Year = {2012},
Month = {Fall},
url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/5989},
Key = {fds211128}
}
@article{fds211129,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Translating Neuroethics: Reflections from Muslim
Ethics},
Journal = {Science and Engineering Ethics},
Volume = {18},
Number = {2},
Pages = {519-528},
Year = {2012},
Month = {Fall},
ISSN = {1353-3452},
url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/5884},
Keywords = {Neuroethics • Muslim ethics • Islam • Islamic
law • Islamic ethics • Neuroscience},
Abstract = {Abstract Muslim ethics is cautiously engaging developments
in neuroscience. In their encounters with developments in
neuroscience such as brain death and functional magnetic
resonance imaging procedures, Muslim ethicists might be on
the cusp of spirited debates. Science and religion perform
different kinds of work and ought not to be conflated.
Cultural translation is central to negotiating the complex
life worlds of religious communities, Muslims included.
Cultural translation involves lived encounters with
modernity and its byproduct, modern science. Serious ethical
debate requires more than just a mere instrumental encounter
with science. A robust Muslim approach to neuroethics might
require an emulsion of religion and neuroscience, thought
and body, and body and soul. Yet one must anticipate that
Muslim debates in neuroethics will be inflected with Muslim
values, symbols and the discrete faith perspectives of this
tradition with meanings that are specific to people who
share this worldview and their concerns.},
Doi = {10.1007/s11948-012-9392-5},
Key = {fds211129}
}
@article{fds211130,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Children’s Rights in Modern Islamic and International Law:
Changes in Muslim Moral Imaginaries},
Series = {Marcia Bunge},
Pages = {292-308},
Booktitle = {Children, Adults, and Shared Responsibilities: Jewish,
Christian and Muslim Perspectives},
Publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
Address = {New York},
Year = {2012},
Month = {Fall},
url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/5942},
Key = {fds211130}
}
@article{fds211127,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Muslim Ethics and Biotechnology},
Pages = {455-465},
Booktitle = {Routledge Companion to Religion and Science},
Publisher = {Routledge},
Address = {Abingdon, Oxford},
Editor = {James W. Haag and Gregory R. Peterson and Michael L.
Spezio},
Year = {2012},
Month = {Spring},
url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/5941},
Abstract = {This essay surveys how Muslim perspectives and practices in
biotechnology is justified within discrete norms and values
of Muslim ethics. At the same time it also points out some
of the challenges in trying to balance development in
biotechnology with concerns of social justice.},
Key = {fds211127}
}
@article{fds213958,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Muslim Political Theology: Defamation, Apostasy and
Anathema},
Booktitle = {International Symposium-Cartoons & Minarets Reflections on
Muslim-Western Encounters, Heinrich Böll
Foundation},
Year = {2012},
url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10161/6068},
Key = {fds213958}
}
@article{fds211126,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {The Spirit of Islamic Humanism},
Pages = {107-116},
Booktitle = {The Humanist Imperative in South Africa},
Publisher = {Sun Press and STIAS},
Address = {Stellenbosch, South Africa},
Editor = {John W. de Gruchy},
Year = {2011},
Month = {Fall},
Keywords = {Islamic humanism},
Key = {fds211126}
}
@inbook{fds199312,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {The Law in the Alchemy of the Self: Abu Hamid
al-Ghazālī},
Booktitle = {Great Muslim Jurists},
Publisher = {Brill},
Editor = {David Powers and Susan Spectorsky and Oussama
Arabi},
Year = {2011},
Key = {fds199312}
}
@inbook{fds199313,
Author = {E. Moosa and Ali A. Mian},
Title = {Islam},
Volume = {2},
Series = {Second},
Pages = {769-776},
Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Applied Ethics},
Publisher = {Academic Press},
Address = {San Diego},
Editor = {Ruth Chadwick},
Year = {2011},
ISBN = {978-0123736321},
url = {http://bookshop.blackwell.co.uk/jsp/id/Encyclopedia_of_Applied_Ethics/9780123736321},
Keywords = {Applied ethics • Muslim ethics • bioethics •
Islamic law • Islamic ethics},
Key = {fds199313}
}
@inbook{fds199314,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Muslim Ethics and Biotechnology},
Pages = {455-465},
Booktitle = {Routledge Companion to Religion and Science},
Publisher = {Routledge},
Editor = {James W. Haag and Gregory R. Peterson and Michael L.
Spezio},
Year = {2011},
ISBN = {978-0-415-49244-7},
url = {http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415492447/},
Keywords = {bioethics • Islam • Muslim ethics • organ
transplantation • cloning • gene
therapy},
Key = {fds199314}
}
@inbook{fds199315,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {The Spirit of Islamic Humanism},
Pages = {106-116},
Booktitle = {The Humanist Imperative in South Africa},
Publisher = {Sun Press},
Address = {Stellenbosch, South Africa},
Editor = {John W. de Gruchy},
Year = {2011},
ISBN = {978-1-920338-56-5},
url = {http://www.africansunmedia.co.za/SuneShop/ProductDetails/tabid/78/ProductId/252/Default.aspx},
Key = {fds199315}
}
@article{fds173991,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Muslim Family Law in South Africa: Paradoxes and
Ironies},
Pages = {331-354},
Booktitle = {Muslim Family Law in Sub-Saharan Africa: Colonial Legacies
and Post-Colonial Challenges},
Publisher = {Amsterdam University Press},
Editor = {Shamil Jeppie and Ebrahim Moosa and Richard Roberts},
Year = {2010},
Month = {Spring},
ISBN = {9789089641724},
Abstract = {http://www.aup.nl/do.php?a=show_visitor_book&isbn=9789089641724},
Key = {fds173991}
}
@article{fds181725,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {History and Normativity in Traditional Indian Muslim
Thought: Reading Shari`a Hermeneutics of Qari Muhammad
Tayyab (d. 1983)},
Pages = {281-301},
Booktitle = {Rethinking Islamic Studies: From Orientalism to
Cosmopolitanism},
Publisher = {University of South Carolina Press},
Editor = {Carl W. Ernst and Richard C. Martin},
Year = {2010},
Key = {fds181725}
}
@article{fds166195,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Colonialism and Islamic Law},
Pages = {158-181},
Booktitle = {Islam and Modernity: Key Issues and Debates},
Publisher = {Edinburgh University Press},
Editor = {Muhammad Khalid Masud and Armando Salvatore and Martin van
Bruinessen},
Year = {2009},
Abstract = {Recent events have focused attention on the perceived
differences and tensions between the Muslim world and the
modern West. As a major strand of Western public discourse
has it, Islam appears resistant to internal development and
remains inherently pre-modern. However Muslim societies have
experienced most of the same structural changes that have
impacted upon all societies: massive urbanisation, mass
education, dramatically increased communication, the
emergence of new types of institutions and associations,
some measure of political mobilisation, and major
transformations of the economy. These developments are
accompanied by a wide range of social movements and by
complex and varied religious and ideological debates. This
textbook is a pioneering study providing an introduction to
and overview of the debates and questions that have emerged
regarding Islam and modernity. Key issues are selected to
give readers an understanding of the complexity of the
phenomenon from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. The
various manifestations of modernity in Muslim life discussed
include social change and the transformation of political
and religious institutions, gender politics, changing legal
regimes, devotional practices and forms of religious
association, shifts in religious authority, and modern
developments in Muslim religious thought. Key Features *Each
chapter contains an overview of relevant secondary
literature and concludes with a summary of the key ideas
presented and a set of questions *Contributing authors
include some of the best-known academics from various
disciplines in the field presenting state of the art
scholarship in their specialised areas. http://www.euppublishing.com/book/9780748637935},
Key = {fds166195}
}
@article{fds166196,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Shariat Governance in Colonial and Post Colonial
India},
Pages = {317-325},
Booktitle = {Islam in South Asia in Practice},
Publisher = {Princeton University Press},
Editor = {Barbara Metcalf},
Year = {2009},
Abstract = {This volume of Princeton Readings in Religions brings
together the work of more than thirty scholars of Islam and
Muslim societies in South Asia to create a rich anthology of
primary texts that contributes to a new appreciation of the
lived religious and cultural experiences of the world's
largest population of Muslims. The thirty-four
selections--translated from Arabic, Persian, Urdu, Bengali,
Tamil, Gujarati, Hindavi, Dakhani, and other
languages--highlight a wide variety of genres, many rarely
found in standard accounts of Islamic practice, from oral
narratives to elite guidance manuals, from devotional songs
to secular judicial decisions arbitrating Islamic law, and
from political posters to a discussion among college women
affiliated with an "Islamist" organization. Drawn from
premodern texts, modern pamphlets, government and
organizational archives, new media, and contemporary
fieldwork, the selections reflect the rich diversity of
Islamic belief and practice in South Asia. Each reading is
introduced with a brief contextual note from its
scholar-translator, and Barbara Metcalf introduces the whole
volume with a substantial historical overview.
http://press.princeton.edu/titles/9061.html},
Key = {fds166196}
}
@article{fds166201,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Genetically Modified Foods and Muslim Ethics},
Pages = {135-157},
Booktitle = {Acceptable Genes},
Publisher = {SUNY Press},
Editor = {Conrad G. Brunk and Harold Coward},
Year = {2009},
Abstract = {http://www.sunypress.edu/p-4870-acceptable-genes.aspx Modern
biotechnology has surpassed science fiction with such feats
as putting fish genes in tomatoes to create a more
cold-resistant crop. While the environmental and health
concerns over such genetically modified foods have been the
subject of public debate, religious and spiritual viewpoints
have been given short shrift. This book seeks to understand
the moral and religious attitudes of groups within
pluralistic societies whose traditions and beliefs raise for
them unique questions about food and dietary practice. What
questions are there for kosher Jews, halal Muslims, and
vegetarian Hindus about food products containing transgenes
from prohibited sources? How do these foods impact the
cultural practices and spiritual teachings of indigenous
peoples? Concerns from the above traditions as well as
Christianity, Buddhism, Chinese religion, and ethical
vegetarianism are included. Contributors look at the ethical
context of each tradition and also include information from
focus groups. This enlightening work concludes with
recommendations for the labeling of genetically modified
foods.},
Key = {fds166201}
}
@article{fds166202,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {“I modelli della tradizione: gli ulema e il concetto di
normatività nell’islam contemporaneo” trans into
Italian (Modalities of Tradition: The `ulama and the Concept
of Legitimacy in Modern Islam)},
Pages = {514-522},
Booktitle = {Le religioni e il mondo moderno a cura di Giovanni Filoramo
iii Islam},
Publisher = {Torino:Giulio Einaudi editore s.p.a.},
Editor = {Roberto Tottolli},
Year = {2009},
Key = {fds166202}
}
@article{fds153862,
Author = {E. Moosa and Aaron L. Mackler and Allen Verhey and Anne Carolyn Klein and Kurt
Peters},
Title = {Spiritual and Religious Concepts of Nature},
Volume = {97},
Number = {1},
Pages = {13-62},
Booktitle = {Altering Naure: Concepts of 'Nature' and the 'Natural' in
Biotechnology Debates},
Publisher = {Springer},
Editor = {Lustig, B.A. and Brody, B.A. and McKenny, G.P.},
Year = {2008},
ISBN = {978-1-4020-6920-},
Keywords = {ethics; science and religion; nature},
Key = {fds153862}
}
@article{fds153863,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Social Change},
Pages = {565-575},
Booktitle = {The Islamic World (Routledge Worlds)},
Editor = {Andrew Rippin},
Year = {2008},
ISBN = {# ISBN-10: 0415366461 # ISBN-13: 978-0415366465},
Keywords = {Islam and social change; law; ethics; politics in
Islam},
Key = {fds153863}
}
@article{fds140665,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Neuropolitics and the Body},
Pages = {47-59},
Booktitle = {Religion and Society: An Agenda for the 21st
Century},
Publisher = {Brill},
Editor = {Gerrie ter Haar and Yoshio Tsuruoka},
Year = {2007},
Month = {Fall},
ISBN = {9789004161238},
Key = {fds140665}
}
@article{fds140666,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Transitions in the 'Progress' of Civilization: Theorizing
History, Practice, and Tradition},
Series = {Voices of Islam},
Pages = {115-130},
Booktitle = {Voices of Change},
Publisher = {Praeger},
Editor = {Omid Safi and Vincent J. Cornell},
Year = {2007},
Month = {Spring},
Key = {fds140666}
}
@article{fds153861,
Title = {The Unbearable Intimacy of Language and Thought: Aporetic
Discourses in Imagining Religion in Islam},
Booktitle = {How Should We Talk About Religion},
Publisher = {University of Notre Dame Press},
Editor = {James Boyd White},
Year = {2005},
Key = {fds153861}
}
@article{fds43349,
Title = {Qadi},
Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World},
Publisher = {New York: Macmillan Reference USA},
Editor = {Richard Martin},
Year = {2004},
Key = {fds43349}
}
@article{fds43350,
Title = {Muslim Ethics},
Booktitle = {Blackwell Encyclopedia of Ethics},
Publisher = {Blackwell},
Editor = {William Schweiker},
Year = {2004},
Key = {fds43350}
}
@article{fds43351,
Title = {Ethics and Social Issues},
Volume = {1},
Pages = {224-231},
Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World},
Publisher = {New York: Macmillan Reference USA},
Editor = {Richard Martin},
Year = {2004},
Key = {fds43351}
}
@article{fds43348,
Title = {Loyalty},
Volume = {3},
Pages = {237-242},
Booktitle = {Encyclopaedia of the Qur’an},
Publisher = {Leiden & Boston: Brill},
Editor = {Jane Dammen McAuliffe},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds43348}
}
@article{fds43353,
Title = {Sunni and Shi‘a},
Volume = {3 P-W},
Pages = {1579-1580; 1672-1673},
Booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Ethics},
Publisher = {Routledge},
Editor = {Lawrence C. Becker and Charlotte C. Becker},
Year = {2001},
Key = {fds43353}
}
@article{fds43371,
Title = {Tensions in Legal and Religious Values in the 1996 South
African Constitution},
Pages = {121-135},
Booktitle = {Beyond Rights Talk and Culture Talk: Comparative Essays on
the Politics of Rights and Culture},
Publisher = {Cape Town: David Philip Publishers},
Editor = {Mahmood Mamdani},
Year = {2000},
Key = {fds43371}
}
%% Reviews
@article{fds140673,
Author = {Ebrahim Moosa},
Title = {Islamic Reform or Designer Fundamentalism? Review Essay of
Tariq Ramadan’s Western Muslims and the Future of Islam
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2003)},
Journal = {Georgetown Journal of International Affairs},
Pages = {139-144},
Year = {2006},
Month = {Winter},
Key = {fds140673}
}
@article{fds140672,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Vartan Gregorian: Islam: A Mosaic, Not a Monolith. Brookings
Institution Press, 2003},
Journal = {Journal of the American Academy of Religion},
Volume = {74},
Number = {4},
Year = {2006},
Key = {fds140672}
}
@article{fds43358,
Title = {Abdolkarim Soroush, Reason, Freedom, & Democracy in Islam:
Essential Writings of Abdolkarim Soroush (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2000)},
Journal = {Iranian Studies: Bulletin of the Society for Iranian
Cultural and Social Studies},
Volume = {37},
Number = {3},
Pages = {547-552},
Year = {2004},
Month = {September},
Key = {fds43358}
}
@article{fds12760,
Author = {Muhammad Sa'id al-Ashmawy},
Title = {"Against Islamic Extremism: The Writings of Muhammad Sa'id
al-'Ashmawy},
Journal = {International Journal of Middle East Studies},
Publisher = {Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida,
1998},
Editor = {Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds12760}
}
@article{fds12764,
Author = {Imran Ahsan Khan Nyazee},
Title = {"Theories of Islamic Law (Islamic Research Institute &
International Institute of Islamic Thought)},
Journal = {Journal for Islamic Studies},
Volume = {18-19},
Pages = {132-139},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds12764}
}
@article{fds12761,
Title = {Abdullah Saeed: Islamic Banking and Interest (Leiden: Brill
1996)},
Journal = {Reigious Studies Review},
Volume = {26},
Pages = {290},
Publisher = {Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1996},
Year = {2000},
Key = {fds12761}
}
@article{fds12762,
Title = {Islam in Europe: The Politics of Religion and
Community},
Journal = {Politikon},
Volume = {27},
Number = {1},
Pages = {167-170},
Publisher = {London/New York: Macmillan Press and St. Martin's Press,
1997},
Editor = {Steven Vertovec and Ceri Peach},
Year = {2000},
Key = {fds12762}
}
@article{fds12763,
Author = {Brannon Wheeler},
Title = {"Applying the Canon in Islam},
Journal = {Journal of the American Academy of Religion},
Volume = {67},
Number = {4},
Publisher = {Albany, NY: State University of New York,
1996},
Year = {1999},
Month = {December},
Key = {fds12763}
}
%% Op Ed Pieces
@misc{fds140671,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {Inside the Madrasa: A Personal History},
Journal = {Boston Review},
Year = {2007},
Month = {January},
Key = {fds140671}
}
@misc{fds12768,
Title = {Law is Meant for Mortals, Does Islamic Law advocate Polygamy
or Monogamy},
Journal = {New Straits Times (Malaysia)},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds12768}
}
@misc{fds12769,
Title = {Iraq Invasion is First Crusade of the 21st
Century},
Journal = {New Straits Times (Malaysia)},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds12769}
}
@misc{fds12770,
Title = {Bush's War Against Islam is Real},
Journal = {Herald-Sun},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds12770}
}
@misc{fds12771,
Title = {Unfair to Direct Blame at Islam},
Journal = {Atlanta Journal-Constitution},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds12771}
}
@misc{fds12772,
Title = {Muslims Must not be Apologists for Terror},
Journal = {Atlanta Journal-Constitution},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds12772}
}
@misc{fds166199,
Author = {Ebrahim Moosa},
Title = {Bush’s War Against Islam is Real},
Journal = {Herald-Sun},
Year = {2002},
Month = {December},
Key = {fds166199}
}
@misc{fds166198,
Author = {Ebrahim Moosa},
Title = {Unfair to Direct Blame at Islam},
Journal = {Atlanta Journal-Constitution},
Year = {2002},
Month = {November},
Key = {fds166198}
}
@misc{fds166197,
Title = {Muslims Must not be Apologists for Terror},
Journal = {Atlanta Journal-Constitution},
Year = {2001},
Month = {October},
Key = {fds166197}
}
%% Other
@misc{fds43347,
Author = {Ebrahim Moosa},
Title = {Entries on topics related to Islam in South Africa,
“People Against Gangsterism and Drugs (Pagad),”
“Muslim Youth Movement,” “Call of Islam”},
Booktitle = {Oxford Dictionary of Islam},
Publisher = {Oxford University Press},
Editor = {John Esposito},
Year = {2003},
Key = {fds43347}
}
@misc{fds13011,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {"Issues in Muslim Bioethics"},
Year = {2002},
Month = {October},
Key = {fds13011}
}
@misc{fds13012,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {"Notion of the Other in Muslim Theology"},
Year = {2000},
Month = {February},
Key = {fds13012}
}
@misc{fds13013,
Author = {E. Moosa},
Title = {"Implications of Language in the Reconstruction of Islamic
Law and Theology"},
Year = {2000},
Month = {February},
Key = {fds13013}
}
@misc{fds43354,
Title = {Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East and North Africa- An
Evolving Relationship},
Series = {Country Forecast 1st Quarter},
Pages = {12-17},
Booktitle = {Economist Intelligence Unit},
Year = {2000},
Key = {fds43354}
}