ILSS: Rami Koujah

On Tuesday, October 14, 2025, at 12:30-1:30PM US EST via Zoom, Dr. Rami Koujah (Harvard Law School) presented “The Invention of Islamic Legal Personhood: From Artifact to Ontology,” a chapter from his forthcoming book, Islamic Legal Personhood: A Genealogy of Rights and Responsibilities (Harvard University Press, forthcoming). This talk explored the conceptual history and significance of “baseline personhood” in Islamic law, focusing on the changed meaning and usage of the term dhimma across the tribal setting of pre-Islamic Arabia, the legal discourses that developed to accommodate the burgeoning market economy of the early Muslim Empire, and the subsequent theorizations of an Islamic jurisprudence infused with a covenantal theology. The talk drew attention to the creative dynamics of Islamic legal reasoning, including the critical role played by of shifting epistemic frames between legal logic and the legal imagination. It concluded by showing how the concept of dhimma emerged in the 11th century as a constitutive element of a metaphysical anthropology, —the ontological ground of an Islamic homo juridicus. Professor Mohammad Fadel (University of Toronto) responded. Watch the video today!