Harvard Law School, Islamic Legal Studies Program, Islamic Finance Project

Place
Cambridge, MA
country
United States
Language
English
Publisher ID
946

Building Bridges Across Financial Communities: The Global Financial Crisis, Social Responsibility, and Faith-Based Finance

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:15

This volume is a selection of 11 papers presented (out of over 30 papers) at the Ninth Harvard University Forum on Islamic Forum sponsored by the Islamic Finance Project at Harvard Law School. The main theme of the Forum, Building Bridges Across Financial Communities sought to explore these opportunities: what lessons on social responsibility can organizations find in Islamic finance and other faith traditions? What can conventional banks and Islamic financial institutions learn from each other, particularly after the financial crisis.

Islamic Finance: Innovation and Authenticity

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:15

Part I: Innovation and Authenticity

Innovation and Authenticity: A Keynote Speech / Robert C. Merton

Innovation and Authenticity in Islamic Finance / M. Umer Chapra

Theory of Higher Objectives of Islamic Law vis-a-vis Islamic Finance / Mansoor Shakil

Authenticity of Islamic Finance in Light of the Principle of Daman / Abdurrahman Habil

Integrating Islamic Finance into the Mainstream: Regulation, Standardization and Transparency

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:15

This book is the second publication of the Islamic Finance Project. It includes a selection of 12 papers presented at the Seventh Harvard University Forum on Islamic Finance on the topic, "Integrating Islamic Finance into the Mainstream: Regulation, Standardization, and Transparency." Followed by a preface by the Editor and an Introduction by Ibrahim Warde, the book is divided into four parts. The first part concerns regulator dilemmas. The second part discusses religious, legal, economic, and political perspectives, covering retail finance in Europe as well.

Islamic Finance - Current Legal and Regulatory Issues

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:15

The Sixth Harvard University Forum on Islamic Finance was held from May 8-9 2004. This book is a compilation of selected writings that were originally presented at this forum. It is divided into four broad sections, with an introduction by Clement M. Henry, Professor of Government and Middle Easter Studies at the University of Texas (Austin). The first section is an introduction to the challenges of regulation within Islamic finance, and deals with moral hazard in Islamic finance.