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Afghanistan

1512. Afghanistan: bloodfeuds, traditional law (pashtunwali) and traditional conflict resolution. Oslo: Landinfo. Country of Origin Information Centre, 2011. 22 pp.

1513. Afghanistan: criminal law, customary justice and informal dispute reso­lution.

Country of origin information report. European Asylum Support Office (easo), 2020. 45 pp. [online].

1514. afshar, Mandana Knust Rassekh. The case of an Afghan apostate— the right to a fair trial between Islamic law and human rights in the Afghan constitution. Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law Online, 10 (2006) pp. 591-605.

1515. ahmad, Aisha. Taliban and the Islamic Courts Union: how they changed the game in Afghanistan and Somalia? Policy Perspectives, 6 ii (2009) pp. 55-72.

1516. ahmed, Faiz. Judicial reform in Afghanistan: a case study in the new Criminal Procedure Code. Hastings International & Comparative Law Review, 29 i (2005) pp. 93-134.

1517. ahsan, Sonia. When Muslims become feminists: khana-yi aman, Islam, and pashtunwali. Afghanistan’s Islam: from conversion to the Taliban. Ed. Nile Green. Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2017, pp. 225-241.

1518. amin, Sayed Hassan. Law, reform, and revolution in Afghanistan: impli­cations for Central Asia and the Islamic world. Glasgow, UK: Royston, 1993. 206 pp.

1519. An introduction to the criminal law of Afghanistan. Afghanistan Legal Education Project (alep). Stanford: Stanford Law School, 2012. 159 pp.

1520. attaei, Hameed. Formal and informal justice in Afghanistan. Con­flicts and conflict resolution in Middle Eastern societies—between tra­dition and modernity. Ed. Hans-Jorg Albrecht et al. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 2006, pp. 381-390.

1521. ayyubi, Sameera. Conflict resolution in Afghanistan and the role of women in formal and informal justice. Conflicts and conflict resolu­tion in Middle Eastern societies—between tradition and modernity.

Ed. Hans-Jorg Albrecht et al. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 2006, pp. 371-380.

1522. barfield, T. Afghanistan: the local and the global in practice of Shari'a. Shari'a politics. Islamic law and society in the modern world. Ed. Robert W. Hefner. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 2011, pp. 179-206.

1523. beck, S. Das afghanische Strafgesetzbuch vom Jahre 1924. Aus dem Persischen übersetzt und mit einer allgemeinen Einleitung in die afghanische Strafgesetzgebung versehen. Die Welt des Islams, 11 (1928) pp. 67-157.

1524. braithwaite, J. & wardak, A. Crime and war in Afghanistan part I: the Hobbesian solution. British Journal of Criminology, 53 ii (2013) pp. 179-196.

1525. carlson, Christopher W. Do it for the kids: the Afghan Juvenile Code in practice. The Indonesian Journal of International and Comparative Law: Socio-Political Perspectives, 2 iii (2015) pp. 555.

1526. dost, Ferial. Das afghanische Recht versus die Rechtsanwendungs­praxis mit frauen- und mädchenspezifischem Schwerpunkt: Afghanische Verfassung, Scharia, internationale Menschenrechtsabkommen und afghanisches Jugendstrafrecht. Frankfurt a.M. etc.: Peter Lang, 2019. 300 pp.

1527. gholami, Hossein. Basics of Afghan law and criminaljustice: a man­ual for the Afghan police and legal professionals. Berlin: The Federal Government, 2006. 298 pp.

1528. giustozzi, Antonio & franco, Claudio & baczko, Adam. Shadow justice. How the Taliban run their judiciary? Kabul: Integrity Watch Afghanistan, 2012. 60 pp.

1529. hakimi, Aziz & wimpelmann, Torunn. Missing from the picture: men imprisoned for 'moral crimes’. Bergen: Chr. Michelsen Institute, cmi Insight, 2 (2018). 8 pp.

1530. hamit, Sherazad. Apostasy and the notion of religious freedom in Islam. Macalester IslamJournal, 1/2 (2006) pp. 31-38.

1531. hashimzai, Mohammad Qasim. The law of theft and related offences In Afghanistan as compared with that of other countries especially England. Ph.D.

dissertation, University of Sheffield, 1983.

1532. “I had to run away”: The imprisonment of women and girls for “moral crimes” in Afghanistan. New York: Human Rights Watch, 2012. 120 pp.

1533. Jupp, John. Legal transplants as solutions for post-intervention crimi­nal law reform: Afghanistan’s Interim Criminal Procedure Code 2004. The American Journal of Comparative Law, 61 i (2013) pp. 51-91.

1534. karampatsi, Eleni. Afghanistan. A comparative approach between EU members and Asian countries. Thessaloniki: The European Law Students Association, Legal Research Group on Criminal Law Perspec­tives on Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment, n.d., pp. 5-15.

1535. Landinfo Afghanistan—Rettvesen og straffeforfolgelse. Oslo: Landinfo, 2010, 28 May.

1536. lau, Martin. Islamic law and the Afghan legal system. London School of Economics Research Online, 2010. 17 pp.

1537. lau, Martin. Legal reconstruction and Islamic law in Afghanistan. The law applied: contextualizing the Islamic Sharia A volume in honor of Frank E. Vogel. Ed. P. Bearman et al. London: I.B. Tauris, 2008, pp. 216-234.

1538. lau, Martin. Afghanistan’s legal system and its compatibility with international human rights standards:final report. International Com­mission of Jurists, Geneva, 2002. 59 pp.

1539. lau, Martin. An introduction to Afghanistan’s legal system. Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law, 8 (2001-2002) pp. 27-44.

1540. mohamad, Tun Abdul Hamid. In search of a suitable model of penal code for Afghanistan. Islam and Civilisational Renewal, 4 ii (2013) pp. 298-303.

1541. mohammad, F. & conway, P. Justice and law enforcement in Afghanistan under the Taliban: How much is likely to change? Policing: An International Journal of Police Strategies and Management, 26 i (2003) pp. 162-167.

1542. munir, Muhammad. The Layha for the Mujahideen: an analysis of the code of conduct for the Taliban fighters under Islamic law. Inter­national Review of the Red Cross, 93/883 (2011) pp.

81-102.

1543. pfeiffer, Julia. Traditional dispute resolution mechanisms in Afghanistan and their relationship to the national justice sector. Verfassung Und Recht in Übersee/Law and Politics in Africa, Asia and Latin America, 44 i (2011) pp. 81-98.

1544. roder, TJ. Human rights standards in Afghan courtrooms: the the­ory and reality of the right to a fair trial. Beiträge zum islamischen Recht, vol. 7: Islam und Menschenrechte. Frankfurt a.M. etc.: Peter Lang, 2010, pp. 329-359.

1545. safi, Mohammad Ismail. Honor killings in Afghanistan. Perspective of Sharia and law. ll.m. thesis, International Islamic University (Islamabad), 2014. 166 pp.

1546. singh, Danny. The management of legal pluralism and human rights in decentralized Afghanistan. The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law, 51 iii (2019) pp. 350-380.

1547. strand, A. Afghanistan. Blodhemn ogprivat hemn. Bakgrunn og prak- sis. Bergen: Chr. Michelsen Institute (cmi), 2007.

1548. suhrke, Astri & borchgrevink, Kaja. Negotiating justice sector reform in Afghanistan. Crime, Law and Social Change, 51 ii (2008) pp. 211-230.

1549. tawfik, Ahmed Hamdy. The concept of crime in the Afghan criminal justice system: the paradox between secular, tradition and Islamic law. A viewpoint of an international practitioner. International Criminal Law Review, 9 (2009) pp. 667-687.

1550. Tellenbach, Silvia. Streiflichter zum neuen afghanischen Straf­gesetzbuch. Islamisches Recht in Wissenschaft und Praxis. Festschrift zu Ehren von Hans-Georg Ebert. Ed. Hatem Elliesie, Beate Anam, Thoralf Hanstein. Frankfurt a.M. etc.: Peter Lang, 2018, pp. 235-248.

1551. tellenbach, Silvia. Fair trial guarantees in criminal proceedings under Islamic, Afghan constitutional, and international law. Zeit­schrift für ausländisches offentliches Recht und Volkerrecht, 64 (2004) pp. 929-941.

1552. tellenbach, Silvia. The Shari'a in the Afghan constitution and its implications for the legal order: constitutional and administrative law, governmental system, administration of justice—fair trial guarantees in criminal proceedings under Islamic, Afghan constitutional and international law.

Zeitschrift fur ausländisches offentliches Recht und Volkerrecht, 64 iv (2004).

1553. wardak, A. & braithwaite, J. Crime and war in Afghanistan part ii: a Jeffersonian alternative? British Journal of Criminology, 53 ii (2013) pp. 197-214.

1554. wardak, A. State and non-state justice systems in Afghanistan: the need for synergy. University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law, 32 v (2011) pp. 1305-1324.

1555. wardak, A. Rebuilding the justice system in Afghanistan: problems and prospects. Euro-Atlantic Quarterly, 16 (2009) pp. 21-30.

1556. wardak, A. Structures of authority and local dispute settlement in Afghanistan. Conflicts and conflict resolution in Middle Eastern societies—between tradition and modernity. Ed. Hans-Jorg Albrecht et al. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 2006, pp. 347-370.

1557. wardak, Ali. Building a post-war justice system in Afghanistan. Crime Law & Social Change, 41 (2004) pp. 319-341.

1558. wimpelmann, Torunn. Adultery, rape, and escaping the house: the protection and policing of female sexuality in Afghanistan. Bergen: Chr. Michelsen Institute, 2017. 15 pp.

1559· wimpelmann, Torunn. The pitfalls of protection. Gender, violence and power in Afghanistan. Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2017. 230 pp.

1560. wimpelmann, Torunn. One step forward and many to the side: com­bating gender violence in Afghanistan, 2001-2014. Women’s Studies International Forum, 51 (2015) pp. 101-109.

1561. wimpelmann, Torunn. The price of protection. Gender, violence and power in Afghanistan. Ph.D. dissertation, University of London (soas), 2013. 234 pp.

1562. yassari, Nadjma & saboory, Mohammad Hamid. Sharia and national law in Afghanistan. Sharia incorporated: a comparative over­view of the legal systems of twelve Muslim countries in past and present. Ed. Jan Michiel Otto. Leiden: Leiden University Press, 2010, pp. 273-317.

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Source: Kondgen Olaf. A Bibliography of Islamic Criminal Law. Brill,2022. — 468 p.. 2022
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