Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Doha, Qatar

Name Arabic
جامعة حمد بن خليفة، قطر
Affiliation ID
6

Islamic Finance and Circular Economy: Connecting Impact and Value Creation

Submitted by Munir on Sun, 01/23/2022 - 22:25

This book is the first of its kind to provide a critical overview and theoretical analysis of the Circular Economy from Shariah and Islamic Finance perspectives. The book is divided into three parts. The contributing authors pay close attention to Islamic Finance in light of sustainability and value creation. It also includes case studies on the Circular Economy application in Islamic Finance industry.

Fintech, Digital Currency and the Future of Islamic Finance: Strategic, Regulatory and Adoption Issues in the Gulf Cooperation Council

Submitted by siteadmin on Tue, 03/23/2021 - 13:24

The banking and financial landscape has been inundated with technology over the last decade, with FinTech, InsurTech and RegTech being just some of the new applications within finance. In the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), FinTech is yet to ­find its feet despite several digital transformation drives initiated by the regional governments in the UAE and Bahrain. In comparison to conventional ­finance, the use of FinTech within Islamic financial institutions (IFIs) in GCC countries is still in its very early stages.

الفقيه والدولة في الثورات العربية: معضلة الفقيه في ظل الدولة الوطنية الحديثة

Submitted by siteadmin on Thu, 03/18/2021 - 13:42

تقوم هذه الدراسة على أطروحة مركزية بَلْورها الكاتب سنة 2008 ، وهي أن مشكلات الفقه الإسلامي المعاصر ناتجة من علاقته بالدولة الوطنية الحديثة التي شكّلت قطيعة مع الموروث الفقهي، ولذلك انقسم الفقهاء في مواجهة متغيرات السلطة إلى ما اصطُلح عليه بالفقيه الحركي والفقيه التقليدي.

The Emerging Field of Ethics in the Context of Modern Egypt

Submitted by siteadmin on Thu, 03/18/2021 - 13:14

This article traces the emergence of ethical thinking (al-tafkīr al-akhlāqī) in Egypt since the late nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century and seeks to identify the motives and contexts of the resurgence of the field of ethics. This era is informed by its connection in Arab thought to the nahda, the so-called Arab Awakening, and, equally, its coincidence with the movement for the revival of Arab tradition and its dissemination. A great number of studies have examined the reform movement in the

Islamic Ethics and Migrant Labor in Qatar

Submitted by siteadmin on Wed, 03/17/2021 - 12:18

This chapter explores how it may be possible to understand the structure and treatment of foreign workers in Qatar in terms of Islamic principles, ethics, and culture. Studies in industrial sociology and organizational psychology have conducted studies of the Islamic work ethic with surveys to determine levels of commitment to work, job satisfaction, and the like. These studies have largely looked toward

The Use and Abuse of Domestic Workers: Case Studies in Lebanon and Egypt

Submitted by siteadmin on Wed, 03/17/2021 - 12:05

This chapter presents information from two surveys of migrant domestic workers one in Beirut, Lebanon and the other in Cairo, Egypt. It examines the social profiles of migrant workers who are recruited through two very different procurement and placement systems and to evaluate their living and working conditions and the types and frequency of abuses perpetrated against migrant domestic workers. Paid domestic workers are in a unique employment relationship that has both occupational as well as personal elements that are clearly identifiable in Arab states.

Irregular Workers in Egypt: Migrant and Refugee Domestic Workers

Submitted by siteadmin on Wed, 03/17/2021 - 11:18

Unlike most other countries in the Arab region, Egypt does not have a regular or significant intake of migrant workers who are contracted to perform the domestic chores of Egyptian households. The legal history of domestic work in Egypt is best characterised as one that denies the validity of paid domestic work as an employment relationship and so it is explicitly excluded from local labour law. While most domestic workers are Egyptian, obtaining work visas for migrant domestic workers is difficult, if not impossible.

Ways Forward in Recruitment of Low-Skilled Migrant Workers: in the Asia-Arab States Corridor [ILO White Paper]

Submitted by siteadmin on Wed, 03/17/2021 - 11:06

Fraudulent practices at the recruitment stage can leave low-skilled workers extremely vulnerable. These practices might include debt bondage linked to payment by low-skilled migrant workers of excessive recruitment fees, costs and charges and deception about the nature and conditions of work, often leading to detrimental contract substitution and human trafficking for labour exploitation. A complex and opaque web of intermediaries including sub-agents and outsourcing agents facilitate visa trading and drive up recruitment charges for low-skilled migrant workers.