<<
>>

Indonesia

1823. abdi, Supriyanto. Islam, religious minorities, and the challenge of the blasphemy laws: a close look at the current liberal Muslim discourse. Religious diversity in Muslim-majority states in Southeast Asia: areas of toleration and conflict.

Ed. B. Platzdasch, J. Saravanamuttu. Singapur: iseas—Yusof Ishak Institute, 2014, pp. 51-74.

1824. abdun nasir, Mohamad. The Majelis Ulama’s fatwa on abortion in contemporary Indonesia. Muslim World, 101 i (2011) pp. 33-52.

1825. afandi, Muhrisun. Apostasy as grounds of divorce cases and child custody disputes in Indonesia. Indonesian and German views on the Islamic legal discourse on gender and civil rights. Ed. Noorhaidi Hasan, Fritz Schulze. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2015, pp. 89-106.

1826. afrianty, Dina. Local women's ngos and the reform of Islamic law in Aceh: the case of mispi. Islam and the limits of the state. Ed. Michael R. Feener, David Kloos, Annemarie Samuels. Leiden & Boston: Brill, 2015, pp. 118-140.

1827. afrianty, Dina. Women and sharia law in northern Indonesia: Local women’s NGOs and the reform of Islamic law in Aceh. Abingdon & New York: Routledge, 2015. 194 pp.

1828. arfiansyah, M. The politicization of Shari’ah: behind the implemen­tation of Shariah in Aceh—Indonesia. m.a. thesis, McGill University, 2009. 103 pp.

1829. ariyanti, Yulida. Punishment conception in Islamic criminal law and Indonesian criminal law system. A comparative study. Ph.D. disserta­tion, Aligarh Muslim University, 1997. 468 pp.

1830. asshidiqie, Jimly. Islam, democracy and the future of the death pen­alty. Melbourne: Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and Society & Asian Law Centre, Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne, 2015. 15 pp.

1831. bennett, Linda Rae. Zina and the enigma of sex education for Indonesian Muslim youth. Sex Education. Sexuality, Society and Learning, 7 iv (2007) pp.

371-386.

1832. blackwood, Evelyn. Regulation of sexuality in Indonesian discourse: normative gender, criminal law and shifting strategies of control. Culture, Health. & Sexuality, 9 iii (2007) pp. 293-307.

1833. boellstorff, Tom. Between religion and desire: being Muslim and gay in Indonesia. American Anthropologist, 107 iv (2005) pp. 575-585.

1834. boomgard, Peter. Male-male sex, bestiality and incest in the early­modern Indonesian archipelago: perceptions and penalties. Sexual diversity in Asia, c.600—1950. Ed. Raquel Reyes, William G. Clarence­Smith. Abingdon: Routledge, 2012, pp. 141-160.

1835. bowen, John R. Contours of Sharia in Indonesia. Democracy and Islam in Indonesia, Ed. Mirjam Kunkler, Alfred Stepan. New York: Columbia University Press, 2013, pp. 149-167.

1836. broecker, Christen. Policing morality: abuses in the application of Sharia in Aceh, Indonesia. New York, NY: Human Rights Watch 2010.

74 pp.

1837. buehler, Michael. The rise of sharia by-laws in Indonesian districts: an indication for changing patterns of power and accumulation and political corruption. Southeast Asia Research, 16 ii (2008) pp. 225-285.

1838. bustamam-ahmad, Kamaruzzaman. The application of Islamic law in Indonesia: the case study of Aceh. Journal of Indonesian Islam, 1 i (2007) pp. 135-180.

1839. butt, Simon. Religious conservatism, Islamic criminal law and the judiciary in Indonesia: a tale of three courts. The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law, 50 iii (2018) pp. 402-434.

1840. cammack, Mark. The punishment of Islamic sex crimes in a modern legal system: the Islamic Qanun of Aceh, Indonesia. Southwestern Law School Research Paper, 2 (2016). 36 pp.

1841. cammack, Mark & feener, R. Michael. The Islamic legal system in Indonesia. Pacific Rim Law and Policy Journal, 21 i (2012) pp. 13-42.

1842. cammack, Mark. Islamic law in Indonesia’s new order. The Inter­national and Comparative Law Quarterly, 38 i (1989) pp. 53-73.

1843.

cochrane, Joe. Islamic law and criminal justice in Aceh. Far Eastern Economic Review, 169 vii (2006) pp. 64-66.

1844. crouch, Melissa. Negotiating legal pluralism in court: fatwa and the crime of blasphemy in Indonesia. Pluralism, transnationalism and culture in Asian law: a book in honour of M.B. Hooker. Ed. Gary F. Bell. Singapore: iseas—Yusof Ishak Institute (Institute for Southeast Asian Studies), 2017, pp. 231-256.

1845. crouch, Melissa. Proselytization, religious diversity and the state in Indonesia: the offense of deceiving a child to change religion. Proselytizing and the limits of religious pluralism in contemporary Asia. Ed. Juliana Finucane, R. Michael Feener. Singapore: Springer, 2014, pp. 17-40.

1846. crouch, Melissa. Asia Pacific: criminal (in)justice in Indonesia: the Cikeusik trials. Alternative Law Journal, 37 (2012) pp. 54-56.

1847. crouch, Melissa. Judicial review and religious freedom: the case of Indonesian Ahmadis. Sydney Law Review, 34 (2012) pp. 545-572.

1848. crouch, Melissa. The Indonesian blasphemy case: affirming the legality of the blasphemy law. Oxford Journal of Law and Religion, 1 (2012) pp. 1-4.

1849. crouch, Melissa. Indonesia’s blasphemy law: bleak outlook for minority religions. Asia Pacific Bulletin, 146 (2012). 2 pp. [online].

1850. crouch, Melissa. Law and religion in Indonesia: the constitutional court and the blasphemy law. Asian Journal of Comparative Law, 7 (2012) pp. 1-46.

1851. crouch, Melissa. The proselytisation case: law, the rise of Islamic conservatism and religious discrimination in West Java. Australian Journal of Asian Law, 8 (2006) pp. 322-337.

1852. dion, Michel. Social trust, the Qur’anic prohibition of corruption, and anti-corruption reforms in Indonesia. Muslim piety as economy: mar­kets, meaning and morality in Southeast Asia. Ed. Johan Fischer, Jeremy Jammes. Abingdon & New York: Routledge, 2020, pp. 29-52.

1853. fathurokhman, Ferry. A study of restorative justice in Indonesia: an eclecticism of Adat law, Islamic criminal law, and modern law.

Ph.D. dis­sertation, Kanazawa University, 2014. 89 pp.

1854. fauzi, Moh. Legal policy of Indonesian government on regional autonomy era (study on law autonomy in Aceh province). Karsa: The Journal of Social and Islamic Culture, 24 i (2016) pp. 15-32.

1855. fazzan, Fazzan & ali, Abdul Karim. Islamic and positive law per­spectives of gratification in Indonesia. Jurnal Ilmiah Islam Futura, 15 i (2015) pp. 1-19.

1856. feener, Michael R. & kloos, David & samuels, Annemarie. Islam and the limits of the state. Reconfigurations of practice, community and authority in contemporary Aceh. Leiden & Boston: Brill, 2015. 249 pp.

1857. feener, Michael R. Shari’a and social engineering. The implementa­tion of Islamic law in contemporary Aceh, Indonesia. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014. 368 pp.

1858. feener, Michael R. Hand, heart and handphone: State sharia, in the age of the sms. Contemporary Islam, 7 i (2013) pp. 15-32.

1859. feener, Michael R. Social engineering through SharTa: Islamic law and state-directed da'wa in contemporary Aceh. Islamic Law and Society, 19 iii (2012) pp. 275-311.

1860. fenwick, Stewart. Blasphemy, Islam and the state. Pluralism and lib­eralism in Indonesia. Abingdon & New York: Routledge, 2017. 207 pp.

1861. freckelton, Ian. Blasphemy law, mental illness and the potential for injustice: a cautionary tale from Indonesia. Psychiatry, Psychology and Law, 27 ii (2020) pp. 169-180.

1862. Grossmann, Kristina. Women's rights activists and the drafting pro­cess of the Islamic Criminal Code (qanun jinayat). Islam and the limits of the state. Ed. Michael R. Feener, David Kloos, Annemarie Samuels. Leiden & Boston: Brill, 2015, pp. 87-117.

1863. Grossmann, Kristina. Muslim female activists and sharia in Indonesia: scopes of acting in national and international perspectives. Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs, 48 i (2014) pp. 92-125.

1864. hapsin, Abu. The applicability of Islamic law to the Indonesian crimi­nal law: a study of the community of Centraljava’s perspective concern­ing sexual misconduct.

Ph.D. dissertation, Salaya, Nakhon Pathom: Mahidol University, 2002. 209 pp.

1865. hasan, Noorhaidi. Religious diversity and blasphemy law: under­standing growing religious conflict and intolerance in post-Suharto Indonesia. Al-Jami’ah: Journal of Islamic Studies, 55 i (2017) pp. 105-126.

1866. hasani, Ismail. The decreasing space for non-religious expression in Indonesia: the case of atheism. Religion, law and intolerance in Indonesia. Ed. Timothy Lindsey, Helen Pausacker. London & New York: Routledge, 2016, pp. 197-210.

1867. hasyim, Syafiq. Politics of fatwa, ‘deviant groups' and takfir in the context of Indonesian pluralism: a study of the Council of Indonesian Ulama. Freedom of expression in Islam. Challenging apostasy and blas­phemy laws. Ed. Muhammad Khalid Masud, Kari Vogt, Lena Larsen, Christian Moe. London etc.: I.B. Tauris, 2021, pp. 157-174.

1868. haveman, Roelof H. The legality of adat criminal law in modern Indonesia. Ciputat, Indonesia: Tatanusa, 2001. 105 pp.

1869. hendrawati, Heni & krisnan, Johny. Indonesian positive law and Islamic criminal law: which is the most comprehensive regulation on anti-corruption? Journal of Law, Policy and Globalization, 85 (2019) pp. 82-85.

1870. hopfner, Maren. Das Pornografie-Gesetz in Indonesien: Eine Gefahr für den Pluralismus? Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs, 28 i (2009) pp. 31-45.

1871. huda, M. Syamsul. The local construction of religious blasphemy in East Java. Journal of Indonesian Islam, 13 i (2019) pp. 96-114.

1872. huda, Yasrul. Contesting Sharia: state law, decentralization and Minangkabau custom. Ph.D. dissertation, Leiden University, 2013. 331 pp.

1873. ichwan, Moch Nur. Official ulema and the politics of re-Islamization: the Majelis Permusyawaratan Ulama, SharTatization and contested authority in post-new order Aceh. Journal of Islamic Studies, 22 ii (2011) pp. 183-214.

1874. ichwan, Moch Nur. The politics of shari'atization: central, govern­mental and regional discourses of shari'a implementation in Aceh.

Islamic law in contemporary Indonesia: ideas and institutions. Ed. R. Michael Feener, Mark E. Cammack. Cambridge, MA: Islamic Legal Studies Program, Harvard Law School, 2007, pp. 193-215.

1875. idria, Reza. Muslim punks and state Shari'a. Islam and the limits of the state. Reconfigurations of practice, community, and authority in contem­porary Aceh. Ed. R. Michael Feener, David Kloos, Annemarie Samuels. Leiden & Boston: Brill, 2015, pp. 166-184.

1876. Indonesia. Policing belief. The impact of blasphemy laws on human rights. A Freedom House Special Report. Washington, DC: Freedom House, 2010, pp. 43-114.

1877. Ishaq. The debates surrounding the accommodation of Islamic adul­tery crime and punishment into Indonesian Criminal Code. Journal of Indonesian Islam, 10 i (2016) pp. 37-62.

1878. Islamic law and criminal justice in Aceh. Jakarta & Brussels: Interna­tional Crisis Group, Asia Report No. 117, 2006. 17 pp.

1879. jamaa, La. Protection of the rights of domestic violence victims: per­spective Indonesian criminal law and Islamic law. Lambert Academic Publishing, 2014. 264 pp.

1880. keane, Webb. Freedom and blasphemy: on Indonesian press bans and Danish cartoons. Public Culture, 21 i (2009) pp. 47-76.

1881. kingsbury, Damien. Devotional Islam and democratic practice: the case of Aceh's qanun jinayat. Culture, religion and conflict in Muslim South-East Asia: negotiating tense pluralisms. Ed. Joseph Camilleri, Sven Schottmann. London: Routledge, 2013, pp. 168-178.

1882. kloos, David. In the name of Syariah? Vigilante violence, territoriality, and moral authority in Aceh, Indonesia. Indonesia, 98 (2014) pp. 59-90.

1883. laskowska, Natalia. Apostasy as a tool to suppress dissent— Indonesian perspective. Rocznik Orientistyczny, 65 ii (2012) pp. 74-84.

1884. lindsey, Tim & pausacker, Helen (eds.). Religion, law, and intoler­ance in Indonesia. London: Routledge, 2018. 396 pp.

1885. lindsey, Tim & kingsley, Jeremy. Talking in code: legal Islamisation in Indonesia and the mmi Shari'a Criminal Code. The law applied: con­textualising the Islamic Sharia A volume in honour of Frank E. Vogel. Ed. Peri Bearman, Wolfhart Heinrichs, Bernard G. Weiss. London & New York: I.B. Tauris, 2008, pp. 295-320.

1886. lindsey, Tim & hooker, M.B. Shari'a revival in Aceh. Islamic law in contemporary Indonesia: ideas and institutions. Ed. R. Michael Feener, Mark E. Cammack. Islamic Legal Studies Program, Harvard University. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2007, pp. 216-254.

1887. lynch, Colman. Note, Indonesia's use of capital punishment for drug­trafficking crimes: legal obligations, extra-legal factors, and the Bali Nine Case. Columbia Human Rights Law Review, 40 (2009) pp. 523-593.

1888. machmudi, Yon. A vision of Shariah-led prosperity: pks attitudes to the implementation of Islamic law. Islamising Indonesia: the rise of Jemaah Tarbiyah and the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS). Acton, ACT: Australian National University Press, 2008, pp. 191-216.

1889. mantilla, Karla. Indonesia: Aceh province arrests women under Sharfa law. Off Our Backs, 36 iv (2006) pp. 4.

1890. MARCOES-NATSIR, Lies. Abortion and the Qur’an: a need for rein­terpretation in Indonesia? Approaches to the Qur’an in contemporary Indonesia. Ed. Abdullah Saeed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, in association with the Institute of Ismaili Studies, 2005, pp. 161-174.

1891. marshall, Paul. The ambiguities of religious freedom in Indonesia. The Review of Faith & International Affairs, 16 i (2018) pp. 85-96.

1892. mawardi, Ahmad Imam. The political backdrop of the enactment of the compilation of Islamic laws in Indonesia. Sharili and politics in modern Indonesia. Ed. Salim Arskal, Azra Azyumardi. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2003, pp. 125-147.

1893. missbach, Antje. “That is Jakarta's project”: views from the Acehnese diaspora on Sharfa, self-determination and political conspiracy. Islam and the limits of the State. Reconfigurations of practice, community, and authority in contemporary Aceh. Ed. R. Michael Feener, David Kloos, Annemarie Samuels. Leiden & Boston: Brill, 2015, pp. 214-242.

1894. muhammad, Ramizah Wan & abdul salam, Khairunnasriah & hussin, Nasimah. The legal framework of Islamic criminal law in Aceh with reference to application, challenges and way forward. Journal of Islam in Asia, 15 iii (2018) pp. 300-314.

1895. mukkarromah, Oom & ubaidilah, Asep. Criminalization on hus­band wife relationship towards Nushuz in the perspective of Islamic law and Criminal Code. Issues in Social Science, 4 ii (2016) pp. 64-82.

1896. mursalin, Ayub. La legislation sur le blasphème et le retrecissement progressif du champ de la liberte religieuse en Indonèsie depuis 1965. Archipel, 98 (2019) pp. 151-176.

1897. mursalin, Ayub. Les restrictions à la liberte de religion et de conviction en Indonesie:genèse et enjeux contemporains de la loi anti-blasphème de 1965. Thèse de doctorat en Sciences juridiques, Universite Paris-Saclay, 2019.

1898. nalle, Victor Imanuel W. Blasphemy law and public neutrality in Indonesia. Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences, 8 ii (2017) pp. 57-62.

1899. nurlaelawati, Euis. For the sake of protecting religion: apostasy and its judicial impact on Muslim's marital life in Indonesia.,Journal of Indonesian Islam, 10 i (2016) pp. 89-112.

1900. olle, John. The Majelis Ulama Indonesia versus “heresy”: the resur­gence of authoritarian Islam. State of authority: the state in society in Indonesia. Ed. Gerry van Klinken, Joshua Barker. Ithaca: Southeast Asia Program, Cornell University, 2009, pp. 95-116.

1901. otto, Benjamin & otto, Jan Michiel. Shari'a police in Banda Aceh: enforcement of Islam-based regulations and people's perceptions. Islam and the limits of the state. Reconfigurations of practice, commu­nity, and authority in contemporary Aceh. Ed. R. Michael Feener, David Kloos, Annemarie Samuels. Leiden & Boston: Brill, 2015, pp. 185-213.

1902. otto, Jan Michiel. Sharia and national law in Indonesia. Towards comparative conclusions on the role of sharia in national law. 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. 433-490.

1903. pausacker, Helen. Morality and the nation: law, pornography and Indonesia’s Islamic defenders front. Ph.D. dissertation, The University of Melbourne, 2013.

1904. peterson, Daniel. Islam, blasphemy, and human rights in Indonesia: the trial of Ahok. London & New York: Routledge, 2020. 224 pp.

1905. peterson, Daniel. Blasphemy, human rights, and the case of Ahok. Islamic law and its implementation in Asia and the Middle East. Ed. Javaid Rehman, Ayesha Shahid. Leiden: Nijhoff, 2018, pp. 52-94.

1906. pompe, S. Between crime and custom: Extra-marital sex in mod­ern Indonesian law. Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde, 150 (1994) pp. 110-122.

1907. ravensbergen, Sanne. Courtrooms of conflict. Criminal law, local elites and legal pluralities in colonial Java. Ph.D. dissertation, Leiden University, 2018. 441 pp.

1908. riddell, Peter G. Islamization, creeping Sharia, and varied responses in Indonesia. Radical Islam’s rules: the spread of extreme Shari a law. Ed. Paul Marshall. Lanham, MD etc.: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2005, pp. 161-184.

1909. salim, Arskal. Politics, criminal justice and islamisation in Aceh. arc Federation Fellowship, Centre for Islamic Law and Society, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne, 2009. 20 pp.

1910. santoso, Topo. Implementation of Islamic criminal law in Indonesia: ta'zir punishment as a solution? IIUM Law Journal, 19 i (2011) pp. 123-148.

1911. siapno, Jacqueline. Shari'a moral policing and the politics of consent in Aceh, Indonesia. Social difference online, 1 (2011), pp. 17-29. [online].

1912. sinaulan, Ramlani Lina. Islamic law and terrorism in Indonesia. International Journal of Nusantara Islam, 4 i (2016) pp. 13-28.

1913. sire gar, Hasnil Basri. Lessons learned from the implementation of Islamic Shariah criminal law in Aceh, Indonesia. Journal of Law and Religion, 24 i (2008) pp. 143-176.

1914. sire gar, Hasnil Basri. Islamic law in a national legal system: a study on the implementation of Shariah in Aceh, Indonesia. AsianJournal of Comparative Law, 3 i (2008) pp. 1-26.

1915. strang, Robert R. “More adversarial, but not completely adversar­ial”: Reformasi of the Indonesian Criminal Procedure Code. Fordham International Law Journal, 32 (2008) pp. 188-231.

1916. syafii, Ahmad. Criminal act of theft in Penal Code perspective and Islamic law. Tadulako Law Review, 2 ii (2017) pp. 140-158.

1917. telle, Kari. Faith on trial: blasphemy and ‘lawfare’ in Indonesia. Ethnos. Journal of Anthropology, 83 ii (2018) pp. 371-391.

1918. tomte, Aksel. Constitutional review of the Indonesian blasphemy law. NordicJournal of Human Rights, 30 ii (2012) pp. 174-204.

1919. uddin, Asma. Religious freedom implications of Sharia implemen­tation in Aceh, Indonesia. University of St. Thomas Law journal, 7 iii (2010) pp. 603-648.

1920. wilson, Ian Douglas. As long as it’s halal’·. Islamic preman in Jakarta. Expressing Islam: religious life and politics in Indonesia. Ed. Greg Fealy, Sally White. Singapore· Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2008, pp. 192-210.

1921. zulfa, Eva Achjani. Restorative justice in Indonesia· traditional value. Indonesia Law Review, 2 i (2011) pp. 33-43.

<< | >>
Source: Kondgen Olaf. A Bibliography of Islamic Criminal Law. Brill,2022. — 468 p.. 2022
More legal literature on Laws.Studio

More on the topic Indonesia:

  1. Boosting global competitiveness in Indonesia: Is Industry 4.0 the answer?
  2. Indonesia
  3. A new strategy of SME governance in new Indonesia era: Better or worse?
  4. Synergy of green industry with industrial revolution 4.0 in Indonesia
  5. Safety behaviour of manufacturing companies in Indonesia
  6. 26 Islam in Indonesia
  7. Investment behaviour in manufacturing companies in Indonesia: Study on leverage, company growth, and cash holding
  8. Structuring Indonesia maritime logistics system through shipping industry, port service provider, and government perspective
  9. CLITORAL RELATIVISM­FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION IN “TOLERANT" ISLAMIC INDONESIA
  10. Women and Sharia Law in Northern Indonesia
  11. Collective ijtihad on health issues in Indonesia
  12. Khutbahs and fatwas in colonial Indonesia and Malaya
  13. Inheritance Rights and Gender Justice in Contemporary Indonesia
  14. Anti-Communist Violence in Indonesia, 1965-1966
  15. Addressing Adverse Formalisation: The Land Question in Outer Island Indonesia
  16. Chapter 2 The Concept of Accounting in Islamic Bank (Indonesia Empirical Cases)