Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics

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The Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics (CILE), leads the reform and renewal of contemporary Islamic legal and ethical thought and behavior by contributing a sustainable ethical framework for addressing contemporary global challenges. CILE’s initiative is maintained by the production, dissemination, and application of Islamic ethical thought and behavior.
Launched in January 2012, CILE specializes in Islamic Legislation and Ethics, with a focus on applied ethics in the fields of Methodology, Arts, Environment, Economics, Education, Food, Gender, Media, Bioethics, Migration & Human Rights, Politics and Psychology.
CILE has developed the following methodological approaches to guide its work:
.Reconciling spirituality and science, legislation and ethics, and laws and objectives, while emphasizing their complementary relationship.
.A broad and positive view of the Islamic sources of legislation and ethics.
.A practical spirit that transforms the science of Maqasid al-Sharia (higher objectives of Islam) from theory to practice in all spheres of life, contributing to the establishment of an Islamic legislative and ethical framework.
.A trans-disciplinary assessment of contemporary legal and ethical challenges.
.A holistic approach whereby scholars of texts from diverse Islamic traditions and scholars of the context from various natural and human sciences engage in an intellectual exercise.
.Critical self-assessment and reasoning that goes beyond short-term crisis management in favor of creative, long-term, transformative solutions to world problems.
CILE also launched its publication activities in three languages; Arabic, English, and French, with the series of “Islam and Applied Ethics” with HBKU Press, online international peer-reviewed “Journal of Islamic Ethics” with Brill, based in Leiden in the Netherlands, to be published in French by Tawhid, and in Arabic by Al-Shabaka.
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Manager, Business Support
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Academic Director
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Professor
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Associate Professor
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The Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics (CILE), leads the reform and renewal of contemporary Islamic legal and ethical thought and behavior by contributing a sustainable ethical framework for addressing contemporary global challenges. CILE’s initiative is maintained by the production, dissemination, and application of Islamic ethical thought and behavior.
Launched in January 2012, CILE specializes in Islamic Legislation and Ethics, with a focus on applied ethics in the fields of Methodology, Arts, Environment, Economics, Education, Food, Gender, Media, Bioethics, Migration & Human Rights, Politics and Psychology.
CILE has developed the following methodological approaches to guide its work:

  • Reconciling spirituality and science, legislation and ethics, and laws and objectives, while emphasizing their complementary relationship.
  • A broad and positive view of the Islamic sources of legislation and ethics.
  • A practical spirit that transforms the science of Maqasid al-Sharia (higher objectives of Islam) from theory to practice in all spheres of life, contributing to the establishment of an Islamic legislative and ethical framework.
  • A trans-disciplinary assessment of contemporary legal and ethical challenges.
  • A holistic approach whereby scholars of texts from diverse Islamic traditions and scholars of the context from various natural and human sciences engage in an intellectual exercise.
  • Critical self-assessment and reasoning that goes beyond short-term crisis management in favor of creative, long-term, transformative solutions to world problems.


CILE also launched its publication activities in three languages; Arabic, English, and French, with the series of “Islam and Applied Ethics” with HBKU Press, online international peer-reviewed “Journal of Islamic Ethics” with Brill, based in Leiden in the Netherlands, to be published in French by Tawhid, and in Arabic by Al-Shabaka.

CILE Virtual Summer School - Ethics & Sports

Submitted by siteadmin on Thu, 06/23/2022 - 08:43

In collaboration with Leuven University (Belgium) and the World Innovation Summit for Health (WISH, Qatar), the 2022 CILE Summer Program will focus on questions pertaining to the key ethical issues related to the field of Sport Studies. Sport and physical activities are compulsory or strongly encouraged in most countries throughout childhood schooling. As an academic field of study, the philosophy of sport has only been developed since the 1970s. Recent controversies in professional sport have sparked a wide-ranging interest in sports ethics.

Genomics: the History, Science and Ethics

Submitted by siteadmin on Tue, 01/04/2022 - 12:11

The Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics (CILE) is resuming the Genomie webinar series via Webex Events.

The webinar will be joined by experts from science, the medical sciences, academia and religion who will share their insights on the history of the field of genomics, scientific applications and the potential of emerging developments and genomics futures. We will also survey the engagement of religious scholars and discuss ethical considerations in genomics. 

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

Global Governance and Labour Migration in the GCC

Submitted by siteadmin on Tue, 03/09/2021 - 11:40

This chapter focuses upon labour migration to the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states, since the massive incomes to these countries, particularly from the oil price increase in the 1970s, resulted in one of the great migration stories of the twentieth century. Still significant, today labour migration to the GCC accounts for over 10 per cent of all migrants globally.