PIL Fall 2025 Event Calendar

The Program in Islamic Law at Harvard Law School (PIL) is pleased to announce an exciting lineup of virtual events this Fall 2025. We host myriad public events and provide other programming and support for students, research fellows, and scholars working in the field of Islamic legal studies, with attention to the intersection of those studies with data science.

About the Program. PIL is a research program dedicated to promoting research and providing resources for the academic study of Islamic law and history, using data science, through a host of online and offline programs, including the following:

Professor Intisar Rabb leads the Program as Faculty Director and editor-in-chief of the Publications. Subscribe to our blog for regular developments and subscribe to our mailing lists for updates on events and publications by visiting our website.


PIL FALL 2025 EVENTS

PIL convenes an Islamic Law Speaker Series that provides a forum for established and emerging scholars to talk about their own recent scholarship, works-in-progress, or developments in the field. Unless otherwise noted, all sessions will be convened and moderated by Dr. Rami Koujah, the 2025-2026 PIL Research Fellow at the Program in Islamic Law. The SHARIAsource Lab, convened by Professor Intisar Rabb, brings together students and researchers to focus on emerging tools in the Islamic digital humanities / data science space, and to developing new components of our in-house data science tools.


TUE 14 OCT 2025 | 12.30-1.30p US EST | Zoom
Islamic Law Speaker Series :: Rami Koujah (Harvard Law School)
The Invention of Islamic Legal Personhood: Artifact to Ontology

On Tuesday, October 14, 2025, at 12:30-1:30PM US EST via Zoom, Dr. Rami Koujah (Harvard Law School) will present “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). This talk explores 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 draws attention to the creative dynamics of Islamic legal reasoning, including the critical role played by shifting epistemic frames between legal logic and the legal imagination. The talk concludes by showing how 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) will respond. Registration is required.


TUE 11 NOV 2025 | 12.30-1.30p US EST | Zoom
Islamic Law Speaker Series :: Youssef Belal (United Nations)
“Thinking the World with Islamic Knowledges”

On Tuesday, November 11, 2025, at 12:30-1:30PM US EST via Zoom, Youssef Belal (United Nations) will present “Thinking the World with Islamic Knowledges” from his book The Life of Shari’a: A Comparative Anthropology of Law (University of California Press, 2025). Is there a way to think about contemporary life with knowledge that is neither modern nor Western? Rather than confining Islam to a “religion” and sharīʿa to its “law,” Belal argues that Islamic shariʿa is a mode of knowledge with its own concepts and scholarly categories through which the world and the self are grasped. The Life of Sharīʿa considers two intertwined lineages: how Islamic scholars have formulated sharīʿa knowledge from the classical period to today and how Westerners have understood the law and its origins. By melding these two traditions, Belal formulates a new genealogy of modern law from the perspective of sharīʿa. Through a new conceptualization of sharīʿa, he offers an argument for its continued relevance to the life of contemporary Muslims. Registration is required.


TUE 10 FEB 2026 | 12.30-1.30p US EST | via Zoom

Islamic Law Speaker Series :: Sohaira Siddiqui (Georgetown University in Qatar)

Siddiqui, Sohaira Z. M. Islamic Law on Trial: Contesting Colonial Power in British India. University of California Press, 2025.

 

On Tuesday, February 10, 2026, at 12:30-1:30PM US EST, Professor Sohaira Siddiqui will introduce her latest monograph, Islamic Law on Trial: Contesting Colonial Power in British India, which reexamines long-held assumptions about Islamic law under British rule. The book uncovers how colonial interventions disrupted existing legal traditions while revealing the strategies through which Muslim elites navigated, negotiated, and at times reshaped the new institutions imposed on them. Islamic Law on Trial interrogates the broader project of juridical colonization and shows that, even amid the violent displacement of Muslim legal authority, local actors found ways to articulate, defend, and at times even advance Islamic law from within the colonial judiciary itself. Their efforts produced a paradoxical legal landscape—one that appeared legitimate to both Muslim practitioners and English administrators, while complicating conventional narratives about continuity and rupture and resistance and collaboration.

 

Webinar Registration Link: https://harvard.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_zINet7KPTvez3xjiEyL_Ng

 


TUE 10 MAR 2026 | 12.30-1.30p US EST | via Zoom

Islamic Law Speaker Series :: Ihsan Yilmaz (Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalization, Deakin University)

Yilmaz, Ihsan. Shari’a as Informal Law: Lived Experiences of Young Muslims in Western Societies. London: Routledge, 2024.

 

On Tuesday, March 10, 2026, at 12:30-1:30PM US EST, Professor Ihsan Yilmaz will discuss his monograph Shari’a as Informal Law: Lived Experiences of Young Muslims in Western Societies (Routledge, 2024). The book takes a comprehensive approach to investigate how sharīʿa manifests in and influences the everyday lives of young Muslims, aiming to unravel the meaning and relevance of sharīʿa-driven laws and practices in English-speaking Western societies. The study recognizes the diverse nature of the Muslim community, comprising both migrants and local converts who form integral parts of multicultural societies. Drawing on in-depth interviews with 122 young Muslims from Australia, the United States, and the United Kingdom, the research explores a diversity of opinions, interpretations, and practices. Moving beyond theoretical debates, it offers concrete insights into the practical implications of sharīʿa in Western contexts. The book also sheds light on how digital technologies shape information and knowledge acquisition, examining how young Muslims seek religious knowledge in the twenty-first century. It will be of interest to academics, researchers, and policy-makers in Law, Political Science, Minority Studies, Religious Studies, and Islamic Studies.

 

Webinar Registration Link: https://harvard.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_6GjAct_tQ6yvgD1mei09cw

 


TUE 7 APR 2026 | 12.30-1.30p US EST | via Zoom

Islamic Law Speaker Series :: Sherman Jackson (University of Southern California)

Jackson, Sherman A. The Islamic Secular. Oxford University Press, 2023.

 

On Tuesday, April 7, 2026, at 12:30-1:30PM US EST, Professor Sherman Jackson will give a talk on his publication The Islamic Secular (Oxford University Press, 2023). The basic point of the secular in the modern West is to “liberate” certain pursuits—the state, the economy, science—from the authority of religion. This is also assumed to be the goal and meaning of “secular” in Islam. Professor Jackson argues, however, that this assumption is wrong. In Islam, the “secular” was neither outside “religion” nor a rival to it. “Religion” in Islam was not identical to Islam’s “sacred law,” or “sharīʿa,” nor did classical Muslim jurists see sharīʿa as the all-encompassing, exclusive means of determining what is “Islamic.” In fact, while—as religion—Islam’s jurisdiction was unlimited, sharīʿa’s jurisdiction—as a sacred law—was limited. In other words, while everything remained within the purview of the divine gaze of the God of Islam, not everything could be determined by sharīʿa or on the basis of its revelatory sources. Various aspects of state policy, the economy, science, and the like were “differentiated” from sharīʿa and its revelatory sources without becoming non-religious or un-Islamic. Given the asymmetry between the circumference of sharīʿa and that of Islam as religion, not everything that fell outside the former fell outside the latter. In other words, an idea or action could be non-sharʿī (not dictated by sharīʿa) without being non-Islamic, let alone anti-Islam. The ideas and actions that fall into this category are what Jackson terms “the Islamic Secular.” Crucially, the Islamic Secular differs from the Western secular in that, while the whole point of the Western secular is to liberate various pursuits from religion, the Islamic Secular differentiates these disciplines not from religion but simply from sharīʿa. Similarly, while both secularization and secularism play key roles in the Western secular, both of these concepts are alien to the Islamic Secular, as the Islamic Secular seeks neither to discipline nor to displace religion, nor expand to its own jurisdiction at religion’s expense. The Islamic Secular is a complement to religion, in effect, a “religious secular.” Nowhere are the practical implications of this more impactful than in Islam’s relationship with the modern state. In his book, Jackson makes the case for the Islamic Secular on the basis of Islam’s own pre-modern juristic tradition and shows how the Islamic Secular impacts the relationship between Islam and the modern state, including the Islamic State.

 

Webinar Registration Link: https://harvard.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_x1CMqEeISPSTqGMktyLD7g