Link to Women's Studies Home Page
navigation banner
     
Home >> People >> Faculty Publications


Faculty
Affiliated Faculty
Adjunct Faculty
Associated Faculty
Staff
Faculty Publications
Courses
Contact

 

  Faculty
  red horizontal rule
 

Papers Published

  1. Kuran, T, Zakat: Islam’s missed opportunity to limit predatory taxation, Public Choice, vol. 182 no. 3-4 (March, 2020), pp. 395-416 [doi] .
    (last updated on 2024/04/19)

    Abstract:
    One of Islam’s five canonical pillars is a predictable, fixed, and mildly progressive tax system called zakat. It was meant to finance various causes typical of a pre-modern government. Implicit in the entire transfer system was personal property rights as well as constraints on government—two key elements of a liberal order. Those features could have provided the starting point for broadening political liberties under a state with explicitly restricted functions. Instead, just a few decades after the rise of Islam, zakat opened the door to arbitrary political rule and material insecurity. A major reason is that the Quran does not make explicit the underlying principles of governance. It simply outlines the specifics of zakat as they related to conditions in seventh-century Arabia.