Vol. 2 No. 1 (2024)
This issue presents scholarly contributions in Islamic jurisprudence, comparative law, judicial interpretation, human dignity, and victim protection. The published studies examine the legal status of women in Islam and pre-Islamic religions, offering comparative analyses with legal systems in Iran, England, and Europe. The issue also evaluates the interpretive and juristic perspectives of Sayyed Kamal Heidari regarding the position of women in Islam, in comparison with the exegetical views of Allama Tabataba’i.
Further contributions analyze the scope of judicial interpretation in Iranian law through a comparative study with English and French legal systems, and explore the jurisprudential ruling of prostration from both Shi’a and Sunni perspectives, with particular emphasis on the Imamiyya view. Additional research addresses the legal consequences of seizing undocumented immovable property under Iranian law and the concept of constructive loss (legal destruction) in Iranian judicial practice.
The issue also investigates the jurisprudential and legal dimensions of human dignity within the framework of Islamic philosophy and provides a comparative study of victim protection mechanisms in cybercrime legislation in India, Canada, and Australia. All contributions have undergone a rigorous peer-review process and aim to advance doctrinal analysis and comparative scholarship in Islamic and public law.


