A key debate in contemporary Western legal theory relating to the role of morals in law manifests in the discourses of positive and normative legal theories. An important part of the debate is defining normativity in law, which positive theory considers to be efficiency and normative theory as ensuring justice. In contemporary Islamic legal thought, however, theoretical discussions on law and morality are scant.Footnote 1 While there are different views on Islamic law and ethics, discourse on the topic is considered relatively new and assumed not to have existed before the twentieth century. Some scholars claim that modern Western liberal concepts have influenced the recent deliberations on Islamic law and morality. For example, Wael Hallaq contends that “the term ‘moral’ as we understand it in modernity did not exist in pre-modern Islam,”Footnote 2 and Marion Katz observes that traditional jurisprudence (fiqh) was not discussed normatively but in legal terms of validity/invalidity.Footnote 3 However, Khaled Abou El Fadl asserts that the role of ethics and reason has been hotly debated in the development of religious traditions and Islamic law since the early centuries, in part influenced by Greek philosophical discourse.Footnote 4
Understanding the debate on law and ethics requires distinguishing Islamic law as sharīʿa revealed texts (Qurʿān and Sunnah or Prophetic traditions) and the jurisprudence (fiqh) derived by scholars and jurists. A key difference between the two is that while the sharīʿa revealed texts are considered to be certain knowledge of God’s will, the jurisprudence (fiqh) consists of rules that entail variable degrees of probability and conjecture (ẓann) about the intent of the revealed texts and the substance of rulings.Footnote 5 While a few scholars argue that sharīʿa revealed texts in general and Qurʿān in particular, are essentially moral,Footnote 6 some others extend the ethicality to the whole body of Islamic law.Footnote 7 Although there seems to be agreement among scholars on the inherent morality of sharīʿa revealed texts, the same cannot be concluded for Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) given its probabilistic dispositions and development based on human efforts.
The legal rulings in sharīʿa revealed texts that are considered moral form a small part of Islamic law.Footnote 8 The bulk of Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) is derived through the process of ijtihād (exertion) whereby Islamic jurists develop rules by using various Islamic legal methodologies. Three broad methodological approaches can be identified in the literature related to Islamic legal theory. First, the traditional juridical theory of law (uṣūl al-fiqh) is the dominant methodology that attempts to derive new rulings from the Qurʿān and Prophetic traditions. The key method of text-based uṣūl is analogy (qiyās), which is used to derive rulings from analogical reasoning by relating new cases to specific legal rules from the sharīʿa revealed texts.Footnote 9 Second, the maqāṣid al-sharīʿa approach that involves purposive interpretation focuses on the objectives (maqāṣid, sing. maqṣid) of the sharīʿa by exploring the legal intent of the Lawgiver (God).Footnote 10 The basis of the purposive legal theory lies in the understanding and application of the objectives of the Qurʿān that emphasize moral and ethical notions in rulings. Finally, legal maxims (qawāʿid al-fiqh) reflect the spirit of Islamic law and represent ethical and legal principles. The maxims (qawāʿid) can be used as persuasive principles and evidence in the development of Islamic law and adjudicating cases in courts.Footnote 11 While there are discussions of each of the Islamic legal methodologies, there is no clarity on how they interact to form a coherent theory of Islamic law. Some scholars find a close relationship between some qawāʿid and maqāṣid, and others link qawāʿid to uṣūl al-fiqh. For example, classical scholar al-Qarafi (d. 1285) maintains that “qawāʿid is the real uṣūl al-fiqh.”Footnote 12
A key issue in Islamic legal theory relates to the legitimacy of Islamic law, which depends on scriptural validation or canonicity that links new rules to the sharīʿa revealed texts that represent the will and intent of God.Footnote 13 Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) resulting from human exertion (ijtihād) is deemed to represent the will of God because well-defined hermeneutical principles are used to establish the relationship of new rulings with sharīʿa revealed texts.Footnote 14 However, these legal methodological approaches provide different perspectives on the nature of legitimacy and canonicity of Islamic law. The relationship between new rules and sharīʿa revealed texts can be viewed in legal and normative terms. Whereas legal legitimacy indicates the relationship of new rulings to the legal rules in the sharīʿa revealed texts, normative legitimacy reflects the embodiment of moral values and goals of the sharīʿa in new rules. The legality and normativity of new rules derived would depend on the nature of the cases and the methods used to develop the rules.
While the juridical theory of law (uṣūl al-fiqh) provides legal legitimacy as it derives law by linking it to the rulings in the revealed texts, it is often criticized for lacking the normativity of sharīʿa. Whereas the Qurʿān is goal-oriented and concerned with the broad principles and objectives of morality, these are missing in some key uṣūl methods that focus on specific details and technical compliance.Footnote 15 The maqāṣid al-sharīʿa perspective was proposed upon the realization that the text-based practice of uṣūl al-fiqh did not serve the purposes of developing law and legal thought to meet the challenges of social change and evolving needs.Footnote 16 Although the maqāṣid entails the normative values and principles of sharīʿa, they are considered too general and expansive for developing specific legal rules. The rulings based on maqāṣid are criticized for being subjective and diluting Islamic content in the law as they fail to demonstrate direct links to rules of sharīʿa revealed texts.Footnote 17 Although jurists can incorporate ethical perspectives by using maxims (qawāʿid) and objectives (maqāṣid) when deriving rules using juridical methods (uṣūl), there is a lack of a cohesive theoretical model that incorporates normative values in rulemaking.
Using elements of Ronald Dworkin’s normative legal theory, I offer a coherent framework of a normative theory of Islamic law that integrates different Islamic legal methodologies. Dworkin’s theory provides a model for introducing morality and justice in the law through three types of legal standards: rules, principles, and policies.Footnote 18 Whereas rules define the legality of legal standards, principles and policies provide moral values and standards and the three standards interact to produce normative law. Uṣūl, qawāʿid and maqāṣid correspond to Dworkin’s notions of rules, principles, and policies, respectively. The legal maxims (qawāʿid) representing Dworkin’s principles operate at an intermediate level and reconcile the disharmony between the positivity of the rules derived using the juridical theory of law (uṣūl) and the broad ethical policies represented by maqāṣid. I use the integrated normative framework to assess rulings on three current issues of environment, organ donation, and Islamic finance. Using the integrated normative legal framework would yield different rulings than do those that focus on the juridical methods that ignore ethics.
Besides contributing to an under-researched area of Islamic normative legal theory, I thus add to the Islamic legal literature in two ways. First, I offer a novel viewpoint on Islamic law in terms of the contemporary debate on positive and normative legal theories and contribute to the discourse on the relationship between Islamic law and morality. Recognizing that the relationship between Islamic law and ethics is contested, I offer nuance and clarity by distinguishing Islamic law as sharīʿa revealed texts (Qurʿān and Sunnah) and jurisprudence (fiqh) derived through ijtihād. Footnote 19 While rules of sharīʿa revealed texts are considered to be inherently moral, the ethicality of fiqh, which forms the bulk of Islamic law, is not conclusive and depends on the links the new rules have with the revealed texts and the methods used to derive them. The normative legal theory provides a framework that considers legal and normative legitimacies in Islamic rulemaking and identifies the specific methods that can be used to produce more ethical jurisprudence (fiqh).Footnote 20 In cases of weak linkages to the rules of sharīʿa revealed texts, the policy goals (maqāṣid) and principles (qawāʿid) can be used for ethical guidance for framing new laws. While the rulings derived using the normative framework will be stated in legal terms of validity/invalidity, they will entail greater moral content and legitimacy.
Second, given the criticisms of using rationality and subjectivity in the maqāṣid approach of rulemaking that weakens the scriptural validity of derived rules, I elucidate the roles of revelation and reason in framing Islamic law. This contributes to the discourse on the role of revelation and reason in Islamic legal thought that has been debated since classical times.Footnote 21 The scope of using reason in deriving rules depends on the extent to which new cases are linked to revealed sources of the Qurʿān and Sunnah. While reason can be used when new situations do not have cases with similar effective legal causes in the sharīʿa revealed texts, its use is guided by the ethical values and principles of sharīʿa.Footnote 22
Legal Theories: An Overview
Laws and legal systems can be understood in the wider context of society and economic and political systems.Footnote 23 Law is a social construction and codifies society’s rules and norms. Legal systems can thus be considered “meaningful normative constructs” existing as elements of social reality.Footnote 24 Theory of law describes the nature or concept of law and explains the criteria of legality that must be satisfied for a norm to qualify as a legal norm.Footnote 25 Legal theoretical approaches related to the nature of law are deliberated in terms of how law is identified and how it links to moral values.Footnote 26 Accordingly, theoretical frameworks of law can be broadly classified into positive and normative, with positive asserting that the social facts alone determine what law is while normative focuses on values and views law in terms of what ought to be. Footnote 27
The positivists view law as value-free, descriptive, and dealing with facts by linking it to the social sources of law that exclude normative sources.Footnote 28 The theoretical framework of positive law posits that societies develop primary and secondary rules that form the building blocks of law and legal systems.Footnote 29 While primary rules confer power and impose duties on people, secondary rules constitute the social rules that provide a framework to identify, create, alter, and enforce primary rules. Secondary rules include the “rule of recognition,” which specifies the criteria of what makes laws valid.Footnote 30 The positivists consider a law to be authoritative and view legal validity as formal compliance with the law.Footnote 31 Legal systems identify the relevant sources and authority of laws and enforcement institutions determine the “rule of recognition” that sets the criteria for what qualifies as rules that constitute valid law.Footnote 32 Institutions that are relevant to the rule of recognition include the legislature that creates the statutes and the judiciary that applies and enforces the law.
Different legal systems have their own secondary rules depending on their political and social realities. The laws of contemporary nation states are hierarchical with the constitution at the apex followed by codes, statutes, and judicial decisions in case laws.Footnote 33 The legal rules of lower levels are bound by higher levels of legal standards such that statutes are confined by constitutional rules, and case laws comply with the stipulations of statutes. In a common law framework, laws are created by both the legislature that enacts statutes and the judgments of the judiciary that become part of jurisprudence. In this sense, judges are considered deputy legislators.Footnote 34 In these jurisdictions, the theory of law covers the nature of law created by the legislature and also the theory of adjudication dealing with judgments and the interpretation of judges in courts.Footnote 35
Positive legal perspectives maintain the separability thesis which asserts that substantive moral value is not a condition of legality.Footnote 36 Because a legal norm exists only if it is validated by the rule of recognition, social and moral norms that do not fulfil the rules of recognition of validity cannot be considered law. The normativity of law under the positive theoretical framework is posited as efficiency, which relates to upholding economic rights and wealth maximization.Footnote 37 Given an initial distribution of resources, efficiency is achieved by using these resources to maximize value and human satisfaction.Footnote 38
By focusing on what law ought to be, normative legal theories include moral correctness as an additional requirement in defining law and focus on what ends are good to achieve and what are the best means of achieving such ends.Footnote 39 This requires defining what is good, which involves value judgments. Normative legal theories identify valid standards that can be used to evaluate the normativity of laws and characterize the moral contents of legal rules.Footnote 40 Normativity relates to norms that elaborate upon moral standards and the duty or obligation arising from them.Footnote 41 Thus, normative legal theories identify the criteria to justify the legal validity of moral norms and the mechanisms through which law-applying organs implement them.Footnote 42
Issues about the morality of legal systems are usually discussed in the light of adjudicating cases that do not have clear rules in the statutes pertaining to the facts of such cases which makes it difficult to make judgments. This is particularly relevant for common law countries where the judgments of courts form a part of jurisprudence. From a positivist perspective, if the rulemaking process is considered legitimate, then the judges should apply the rules without considering any moral issues.Footnote 43 In cases with no clear rules, the positivist perspective asserts that the criteria of efficiency and value maximization should be considered by judges in deciding disputes.Footnote 44 However, normative theoretical perspectives emphasize that judges should use moral considerations such as justice along with rules contained in statutes and case law.Footnote 45
Dworkin’s Normative Legal Theory
Dworkin applies a rights perspective to law by assuming that “citizens have moral rights and duties with respect to one another, and political rights against the state as a whole.”Footnote 46 He asserts that “moral and political rights should be recognized in positive law” and “enforced upon the demand of individual citizens through courts or other judicial institutions.”Footnote 47 In contrast to the positivist view of the rule of recognition, Dworkin suggests a “coherence theory of legal truth” that argues that a correct decision in a case should depend not only on how well it fits into the comprehensive and consistent interpretations of the legal system but also on the justification by principles of morality.Footnote 48 He develops a framework of normative legal theory by classifying legal standards into rules, principles and policies.Footnote 49 Rule is defined similarly to the positivist perspective as “a command as an expression of desire that others behave in a particular way, backed by the power and will to enforce that expression in the event of disobedience.”Footnote 50 Rules stipulate specific things that relate to validity and exist in an all-or-nothing fashion.Footnote 51 Thus, rules have binary outcomes such as prohibited and allowed or obligatory and nonobligatory.Footnote 52
Principle is defined as “a standard that is observed, not because it will advance or secure an economic, political, or social situation deemed desirable, but because it is a requirement of justice or fairness of some other dimension of morality.”Footnote 53 Principles are considered general and fundamental maxims of law and represent the substantive values and purposes of a community.Footnote 54 Two properties of principles can be identified. First, they comprise normative moral statements related to social goals such as justice and morality. The values can relate to individual issues such as justice and benevolence or can be collective such as achieving goals related to the environment and equality.Footnote 55 Contrary to rules, a feature of principles is that they carry different weights or importance and can be applied in varying degrees. A value principle expresses an ideal that cannot be achieved totally but in degrees.Footnote 56 Second, the principles can be used by judges to make decisions,Footnote 57 and actions are judged according to the degrees to which they align with the principles that guide judges to arrive at legal decisions.Footnote 58 Principles of justice, however, are not legally binding but instead are applied on moral grounds. In this sense, the principles are applied voluntarily from their power of reason in the framework of the social contract.Footnote 59
Policy is defined as a “standard that sets out a goal to be reached, generally an improvement in some economic, political, or social feature of the community.”Footnote 60 As a social goal, policies identify benefits and burdens and their trade-offs for the community and can be introduced when creating legislation. For example, economic efficiency and equality can be policy goals because they lead to the largest aggregate economic benefit that need to be distributed according to some criteria.Footnote 61 Because policy “advances or protects some collective goal of the community as a whole” and principles “secure some individual or group right,” they can be thought to relate to political decisions.Footnote 62
Dworkin’s legal theory can be used in framing legal rights and duties in rules and also in disputes. An option would be to embed the policies and principles in forming the normative character of law in the rules of law.Footnote 63 Policies affecting fairness can be introduced through legislation and regulations because policies setting out social goals lie in the realm of political decisions. In this framework, principles provide the normative propositions that establish the purposes of law and rules are used to achieve these goals by stating actions and consequences.Footnote 64
The focus of Dworkin’s normative theory relates to the adjudication of hard cases in which existing rules do not provide a clear basis for making judgments. A key issue in normative theory concerns the intention or purpose of a particular statute or legal clause in terms of the rights that it provides with respect to the social goals identified in the policies. This becomes relevant in cases where the rules do not cover specifics, which makes it difficult to make judgments. While one way to decide these cases is to use values inherent in the legislative purpose, it may be difficult to ascertain legislative intent.Footnote 65 In cases where rules are not specific and judges are not able to ascertain legislative intent, Dworkin’s normative theory suggests using policy objectives and principles entailing moral underpinnings to make judgments.Footnote 66 However, because policies may be expressed in general terms, they allow for a variety of interpretations and evaluations by judges.Footnote 67
Recognizing that judging cases based on policies that represent social goals may give judges broad discretion in interpretation, judges should make decisions based on principles rather than policies.Footnote 68 The discretion of judges is minimized by using principles as they constitute an “interpretive source to fill gaps in the law and a general source of values.”Footnote 69 However, it is also possible that various principles provide different and contradictory directions. In adjudicating cases, judges are likely to use relevant principles that reflect fairness and the institutional history of the legal system and prefer judgments that are supported by more important principles.Footnote 70
Islamic Legal Theories and Methodologies
The sources of Islamic law can be broadly classified as revealed and derived. Revealed knowledge includes the sharīʿa revealed texts that form the universal standards of Islamic law and constitute the primary source of rules and values. Sharīʿa revealed texts can be further divided into the recited revelation (the Qurʿān) and the non-recited revelation (the Sunnah or Prophetic traditions).Footnote 71 The second source of Islamic law is derived from human intellect through ijtihād (exertion), whereby Muslim jurists attempt to formulate rules based on primary sources in cases where revealed knowledge has no explicit views.Footnote 72 The scholars and jurists derive rulings (fatāwā, sing. fatwā) using various methods based on sharīʿa principles and the injunctions of preceding jurists to expand the body of Islamic law. The derived jurisprudence resulting from ijtihād is referred to as fiqh, which is organized in various branches (furūʿ).Footnote 73 Because the derivation of fiqh requires knowledge of both the sharīʿa revealed texts and legal methodologies, the authority of developing Islamic laws lies with scholars and jurists.Footnote 74
Islamic legal and moral rulings are presented under defining law (ḥukm taklīfī), which classifies actions into five categories: (1) obligatory (wājib), (2) preferable or recommended (mandūb), (3) permissible (mubāḥ), (4) abominable or reprehensible (makrūh), and (5) prohibited (ḥarām).Footnote 75 Whereas the obligatory (wājib) and the prohibited (ḥarām) have legal force and can be adjudicated in courts, the recommended (mandūb) and the reprehensible (makrūh) represent moral and ethical norms.Footnote 76 The permissible (mubāḥ) comprises all acts that are permissible and are neutral in terms of any moral or legal connotations.Footnote 77 Although Islamic legal rules and moral norms exist in sharīʿa revealed texts (Qurʿān and Sunnah), their number is relatively small.Footnote 78
Given the limited number of specific rules in sharīʿa revealed texts, different legal methodologies are used to derive rules when new situations arise. To retain their religious nature, derived laws must reflect the will and intent of the Lawgiver (God) and be harmonious with the Qurʿān and Sunnah. Because ijtihād involves human efforts and interpretations, an important debate in Islamic legal theory is concerned with the role and use of revelation and reason to extract new rulings.Footnote 79 A key issue in this debate relates to the legitimacy of derived rules and specifying the criteria of what makes laws valid, which corresponds to the rule of recognition in Western legal thought. The legitimacy of Islamic law is determined by scriptural validation or the degree of canonicity that links new rulings to legal principles and moral norms of sharīʿa revealed texts. Whereas the legal legitimacy of new rulings depends on the relationship with rules of sharīʿa revealed texts, normative legitimacy is reflected by compliance with the moral values and goals entailed in the Qurʿān and Sunnah.
The underlying guiding normative principle governing Islamic law is to promote welfare (maṣlaḥa) or benefit and prevent harm (mafṣada).Footnote 80 Given the goals of sharīʿa of promoting welfare and preventing harm, the legal rules of sharīʿa revealed texts are considered to be inherently moral.Footnote 81 It is believed that “God orders the good because it secures the welfare of the community and forbids evil because it is evil and against the public good.”Footnote 82 Justice is another overriding objective of Islam as the Qurʿān and Sunnah ordain it and prohibit injustice.Footnote 83 The legal and normative legitimacies of the jurisprudence (fiqh) derived through ijtihād depend on the strength of links of new cases to the rules and values of sharīʿa revealed texts and the methods used to develop such rules.
Juridical Theory of Law (Uṣūl al-fiqh)
The dominant Islamic legal theory (uṣūl al-fiqh) started with the writings of the ninth-century scholar Abu Abdullah Muhammad ibn Idris Al-Shafi’i (767–820 CE) and evolved over time.Footnote 84 The term uṣūl (sing. aṣl) means origins but also signifies principles or rules. Footnote 85 Al-Shafi’i laid down the rules of applying reason in developing laws which later evolved into the methodological discipline of Islamic legal theory of uṣūl al-fiqh. Footnote 86 Uṣūl al-fiqh is translated variously as sources of law,Footnote 87 principles of jurisprudence,Footnote 88 sources and methods,Footnote 89 and juridical theory. Footnote 90 Uṣūl al-fiqh (termed briefly as uṣūl) is the formal science of dealing with legal theories, the principles of interpretations of the legal texts, methods of reasoning and deduction of rules.Footnote 91 Other than depending on the laws and rules in the primary sources of sharīʿa (Qurʿān and Sunnah), uṣūl identifies other methods of deriving legal rulings.Footnote 92 Most Islamic positive law is derived by using different methods of uṣūl al-fiqh. Footnote 93
Two widely accepted sources of deriving law used under uṣūl are consensus (ijmāʿ) and analogy (qiyās). Ijmāʿ is the unanimous agreement of the scholars of the Muslim community on a particular matter and is considered the third source of Islamic law after the Qurʿān and Sunnah.Footnote 94 Another agreed-upon method to deduce laws is qiyās (analogy), whereby a concept is identified in the original case (aṣl) in the sharīʿa revealed texts and extended to a new case if the latter has the same effective cause (ʿilla)Footnote 95 as the original. Specifically, if the new case has a shared or similar effective cause as the original case in the sharīʿa revealed texts, then the ruling from the original case is applied to the new case.Footnote 96 While qiyās provides legal legitimacy by linking new rules to the revealed texts, the role of human rationality and reason in deriving new rulings depends on the clarity of effective cause (ʿilla) in the sharīʿa revealed texts. In cases where the effective cause is obscure or not apparent, jurists use intellect and rationality to arrive at rulings, which can result in probabilistic and diverse interpretations.Footnote 97
Beyond the agreed-upon methods of consensus (ijmāʿ) and analogy (qiyās), some other methods are also suggested by different jurisprudential schools, particularly for cases that do not have a clear effective cause (ʿilla) in the sharīʿa revealed texts.Footnote 98 Juristic preference (istiḥsān) is “a legal principle which authorises departure from an established precedent in favour of a different ruling for a reason stronger than the one which is obtained in that precedent.”Footnote 99 Istiḥsān involves using discretion to avoid rigidity and unfairness that might result from a literal understanding and interpretation of the law. In using istiḥsān, a former fiqh ruling arrived at by analogy (qiyās) can be set aside by using a better proof from the Qurʿān and Sunnah to arrive at a fairer ruling. Another important method is unrestricted interest (maṣlaḥa mursala), which is used in cases that do not have direct references in the sharīʿa revealed texts making the use of qiyās difficult.Footnote 100 In these cases, rulings are made to enhance the benefits or welfare (maṣlaḥa) of people and to prevent harm (mafṣada). Both juristic preference (istiḥsān) and unrestricted interest (maṣlaḥa mursala) would use normative judgments to derive rules.Footnote 101
In some cases, ḥiyal (sing. ḥila) is also used to derive new rules. Ḥila has been used historically as legal stratagems or devices to achieve certain outcomes that may be lawful or unlawful.Footnote 102 One way in which ḥila is used is to focus on the form rather than the substance of the law. During contemporary times some scholars use eclectic ijtihād to derive rules by using methods that are not recognized in the original list of methods of uṣul al-fiqh. Footnote 103 The method of selection (takhayyur) adopts suitable injunctions of past scholars from different schools to derive rulings and patching (talfīq) is used to derive rulings by combining opinions from different sources of jurisprudential schools.Footnote 104 These methods do not refer to sharīʿa revealed texts directly and sometimes use minority views of past scholars to derive rulings.
Purposive Based Theory (Maqāṣid al-Sharīʿa)
The purposive theory based on the notions of maṣlaḥa and maqāṣid al-sharīʿa presents a normative foundation of Islamic law by positing that the primary goal of the Lawgiver is the good of people.Footnote 105 Maṣlaḥa, translated variously as public interest, well-being, and welfare,Footnote 106 is classified into three categories: necessities (ḍarūriyyāt), complementary requirements (ḥājiyyāt), the luxuries (taḥsīniyyāt).Footnote 107 The ḍarūriyyāt (sing. ḍarūra) are essentials that form the basic elements of a good life, and their absence or defect can lead to the breakdown of the social order of a community.Footnote 108 The complementary requirements (ḥājiyyāt, sing. ḥāja) alleviate hardship, help to attain comfort, and are needed for the proper functioning of the community and the achievement of its interests. The absence of ḥājiyyāt impedes the functioning of social order but does not lead to its collapse. Taḥsīniyyāt are luxuries and beautifiers that contribute to a peaceful life and promote the splendor and perfection in the social order and condition of a community.
The goals of sharīʿa (maqāṣid al-sharīʿa) include the protection of essentials (ḍarūriyyāt) and entail the basic elements of a good life, which are identified as safeguarding the faith, self, intellect, posterity, and wealth.Footnote 109 Furthermore, justice is ordained by religious texts (Qurʿān and the Sunnah) as an overriding objective of Islam, and it should permeate all aspects of social and economic relations.Footnote 110 Contemporary scholars have expanded the scope of maqāṣid to include several other societal issues. For example, al-Qaradawi includes concepts of fraternity and human rights along with freedom and equity as elements of maqāṣid,Footnote 111 and Auda considers maqāṣid as divine intents and moral concepts that are linked to contemporary notions of human rights, development, and civility.Footnote 112 Similarly, Attia identifies several additional purposes of sharīʿa, which he organizes under individual, family, the umma and humanity.Footnote 113 Ibn Ashur asserts that maqāṣid should include equality and freedom and adds other objectives of sharīʿa such as building a strong community and stable social system. He also recognizes specific maqāṣid for different types of human activities and dealings. For example, he identifies the maqāṣid for economic transactions as marketability, transparency, preservation, durability, and equity or justice.Footnote 114
While the purposes and objectives (maqāṣid) of sharīʿa have been discussed by scholars since the twelfth century,Footnote 115 Abu Isḥaq Ibrahim ibn Musa al-Shatibi (1320–1388 CE) presented the maqāṣid al-sharīʿa based methodology in detail. The maqāṣid al-sharīʿa (briefly referred to as maqāṣid) approach focuses on the normative goals of sharīʿa revealed texts and is based on the premise that the Qurʿān provides general principles representing the intention of the Lawgiver (God) which form the purposes and objectives of the sharīʿa.Footnote 116 Maqāṣid constitutes the higher goals of sharīʿa that are permanent and universal signifying the wisdom (ḥikma) of legislationFootnote 117 and representing “divine intents and moral concepts upon which the Islamic law is based.”Footnote 118
Unlike the key method of qiyās in uṣūl al-fiqh that is centered on technical and formal issues of linking rules to the texts, the maqāṣid approach is concerned with values and deriving rulings related to issues faced in reality.Footnote 119 Emphasizing that the values and objectives of the sharīʿa cannot be understood by examining linguistic forms only, al-Shatibi’s purposive legal methodology suggests incorporating maqāṣid as an essential part of law-making.Footnote 120 Beyond examining the texts and the methods of deduction, this would require an adequate understanding of the objectives of the sharīʿa.Footnote 121 Al-Shatibi suggests using the method of inductive reasoning (istiqrā’) to arrive at maqāṣid that are used to derive sharīʿa rulings.Footnote 122
Instead of examining specific rulings, a general and overall reading of various sharīʿa revealed texts leads to the derivation of maqāṣid. For example, even though the Qurʿān does not have a specific verse stating the goal of the sharīʿa is the welfare of mankind, it can be concluded from its general reading.Footnote 123 Based on the readings of texts, scholars have concluded that the underlying principle guiding sharīʿa rulings is related to the end result of increasing welfare and minimizing harm.Footnote 124 Thus, sharīʿa ordains doing certain acts as they “secure the welfare of the community and forbid evil” because it is against the public welfare.Footnote 125 Because maqāṣid relate to the consequences of acts, their neglect can lead to rules deviating from the Lawgiver’s intent of enjoining good. Viewed as purposes and goals, maqāṣid can be considered as providing teleological ethical perspectives of sharīʿa. Specific methods of unrestricted interests (maṣlaḥa mursala) and juristic preference (istiḥsān) discussed above use the methodology of purposivism to derive rules that can achieve the maqāṣid.
Legal Maxims (Qawāʿid al-fiqh)
An important genre of Islamic legal theory literature is the legal maxims (qawāʿid al-fiqh) that reflect the spirit of Islamic law.Footnote 126 While the existence of qawāʿid (sing. qaida), which technically means principles, can be traced back to the seventh century CE, they became more prominent in the legal writings of the fourteenth century.Footnote 127 Based on recognized references in the religious texts and jurisprudence, the maxims evolved over time to become general principles manifesting the essence of sharīʿa.Footnote 128 Qawāʿid al-fiqh is defined as “universal legal principles which are formulated in regulative and concise expressions that contain general normative legal determinations about the cases of their subject.”Footnote 129 Legal maxims form a key tool in law-making as they represent “settled principles of law to which jurists appeal to when confronting new legal cases”Footnote 130 and embody universal rules that can be applied to particular cases.Footnote 131
Legal maxims can be categorized in different ways. One way to distinguish maxims is between those derived from religious texts (Qurʿān and Sunnah) and the ones that are extracted from fiqh by jurists.Footnote 132 Those derived from religious texts carry more weight and influences the decisions of jurists and judges, and those extracted from fiqh by jurists provide persuasive influence in forming rules and judicial decisions. Although there is general agreement among different schools on most qawāʿid derived from religious texts, some maxims can differ across jurisprudential schools.Footnote 133 Maxims can also be viewed as those having legal connotations and others as having ethical overtones. For example, the maxims “if permissibility and prohibition coincide, prohibition prevails” and “what is prohibited to take is also prohibited to give”Footnote 134 fall in the legal category. Maxims with ethical undertones include “the fundamental requirement in every contact is justice.”Footnote 135 Maxims are also categorized as major maxims and sub-maxims derived from these.Footnote 136
Another way in which the qawāʿid are categorized is interpretive maxims (qawāʿid al-uṣūliyya) and substantive maxims (qawāʿid al-fiqhiyya).Footnote 137 While interpretive maxims relate to “textual principles of interpretation drawn from the field of jurisprudence,” substantive maxims are linked to “principles more closely related to the structure or substance of positive law.”Footnote 138 Although qawāʿid al-uṣūliyya concerns hermeneutic principles relating to language-oriented rules which are used to understand the implications of the sharīʿa revealed texts that are used in deducing laws, some maxims under it are common with qawāʿid al-fiqhiyya entailing principles that guide some methods of ijtihād. Footnote 139
Other than providing ethical principles, some maxims provide specific standards related to lawmaking. For example, the maxim “custom is considered unless it conflicts with the text” provides a framework for the use of custom (ʿurf) as a source of law-making.Footnote 140 Similarly, some other maxims are used to develop a legal method of concession (rukhṣa) that is used to create rules in exceptional cases. The maxims “hardship begets facility” and “necessities render the prohibited permissible”Footnote 141 are used to derive rulings that suspend the accepted rules of sharīʿa in cases of hardships or necessities (ḍarūriyyāt). While concession (rukhṣa) can be used to abandon or dilute the force of established law, another maxim, “when the impediment is removed, the original sharīʿa ruling is restored to full effect,”Footnote 142 limits the leniency and universal use of the method. The rules derived for exceptional cases by using concession become void once the necessity or difficulty ceases to exist.Footnote 143 Rules derived using concession (rukhṣa) indicate cases in which normative legitimacy prevails over legal legitimacy.
Critical Appraisal of Islamic Legal Methods
The Islamic legal theories presented above are discussed in a dispersed manner by either presenting each approach independently or in pairs such as discussing uṣūl and qawāʿid or qawāʿid and maqāṣid. Some scholars view qawāʿid al-fiqh to be on an equal footing as uṣūl al-fiqh and identify one of its functions as being to “structure and systemize the law.”Footnote 144 While the relationship between qawāʿid and uṣūl al-fiqh is recognized, the notions of maqāṣid and qawāʿid are also linked to each other through their close connection to the rules and values of sharīʿa revealed texts. Whereas maqāṣid are derived by understanding the underlying intentions of the Lawgiver in the rulings in the sharīʿa revealed texts, the qawāʿid are “abstracted from the corpus of legal rulings summarizing the legal principles.”Footnote 145 The close affinity between qawāʿid and maqāṣid is reflected in several maxims providing principles related to maqāṣid that support the overall purposes of sharīʿa of promoting welfare (maṣlaḥa) and preventing harm.Footnote 146 Examples of such maxims include “harm is to be eliminated” and “averting harm takes precedence over achieving benefit.”Footnote 147
Some limitations of the individual Islamic methodologies discussed above can be identified. The use of the traditional text-based legal theory of uṣūl al-fiqh to produce formal fiqh is criticized for being without spirit and devoid of reality.Footnote 148 Jurists of the post-classical period added technicalities in identifying the effective cause (ʿilla) that detached the rulings from maṣlaḥa. Footnote 149 In cases where the link with the ʿilla in the texts is weak or ambiguous, the rulings using qiyās become speculative and probabilistic in terms of representing the intentions of the Lawgiver.Footnote 150 The probabilistic element in qiyās can arise in interpretations of rules in the sharīʿa texts as a large number of legal directives of the Qurʿān and Sunnah are broad and general, instead of specific injunctions.Footnote 151 The rulings derived from using uṣūl al-fiqh have also been critiqued for not being able to address the needs of the contemporary era of statutory legislation adequately.Footnote 152
The need to use maṣlaḥa and maqāṣid in rulemaking and reviving Islamic law has been discussed since the eleventh century as scholars started to express concerns about the ability of dominant legal methodology of uṣūl to produce appropriate positive law for the needs of Muslim societies.Footnote 153 However, the purposive approach is deemed to be inappropriate for deriving specific rulings because the concepts of maqāṣid are broad and general. Arguing that the goals of the Lawgiver (God) are difficult to ascertain and that they are perfectly assimilated in the textual rules, some scholars supporting the textual uṣūl approach contend that discovering the objectives and their application to derive rulings requires recourse to human rationality and judgment.Footnote 154 Thus, use of the maqāṣid approach involves juristic speculation because different interpretations can be derived from the objectives of the sharīʿa that are expressed broadly and in general terms.
The expansive use of maṣlaḥah to derive laws is further criticized for using human reasoning without constraints, which can lead to diversions of new rules from the rules and ethics entailed in the sharīʿa revealed text.Footnote 155 The critics contend that subjectivity involved in using the maqāṣid approach can lead to an unprincipled legal system that entails a multiplicity of interpretations reflecting various individualistic preferences. For example, Shalakany maintains that the purposive approach to deriving laws is strained as reinterpretation of the scripture is used to rationalize modern legal views that are not traditionally accepted.Footnote 156 While the maqāṣid approach makes Islamic law more adaptable to social change, doubts about the correct comprehension of the goals of revelation and its interpretive expansiveness by using rational reasoning weakens the links to sharīʿa revealed texts.
Even though the maxims form an important part of Islamic legal theory and are closely linked to sharīʿa revealed texts, they are not used extensively in present-day law-making. Discussions on the role of qawāʿid in the overall Islamic legal theory are relatively scant during contemporary times.Footnote 157 With the exception of a few studies that discuss the implications of qawāʿid in the modern era such as KamaliFootnote 158 and Zakariyah,Footnote 159 most contemporary literature on qawāʿid examines the historical discourses. Kamali is among the few who suggest using maxims in contemporary times and asserts that the language and style of contemporary statutes and civil codes are similar to legal maxims.Footnote 160 Thus, for some areas of Islamic law such as personal law and the law of transactions, maxims can play a supplementary role to substantive legislation.
Islamic Normative Legal Theory: Building Blocks and Framework
Given the limitations of the text-based legal theory of uṣūl al-fiqh in developing laws in a changing world and the criticisms of the maqāṣid approach of using rationality and subjectivity that weakens the legitimacy of derived laws, I offer a coherent legal theoretical framework of Islamic normative law that encompasses all three methodologies (uṣūl, qawāʿid, and maqāṣid) by using Dworkin’s normative legal theoretical model. In particular, the legal methods of maqāṣid, qawāʿid and rulings derived from the methods of uṣūl can be discussed in light of Dworkin’s notions of policy, principles, and rules to develop an integrated normative theory of Islamic law.
Dworkin’s Legal Standards and Islamic Legal Theories
As noted, Dworkin defines policies as legal standards that represent goals related to improvement in some economic, political, or social feature of the community.Footnote 161 Policies are political decisions made through some political process that protect or advance some collective goal of the community as a whole.Footnote 162 The suggestions of the positivists of judging hard cases based on efficiency and the focus of normativists on using equity and justice for the same represent the policies that reflect the collective goals of a society. Because maqāṣid are also presented as the goals of sharīʿa that enhance human welfare, they are similar to policies. The maqāṣid are expressed not only as the overall objective of achieving societal welfare (maṣlaḥa) but also as the specific goals of protecting and enhancing life, religion, intellect, progeny, wealth, and dignity for all individuals. Furthermore, there are other maqāṣid such as justice and equity and specific goals related to economic transactions identified by contemporary scholars.Footnote 163 Because maqāṣid is akin to policy, it falls in the realm of political decision.
While policies identify and establish collective goals, principles in Dworkin’s theory are concerned with establishing individual rights.Footnote 164 Principles represent moral standards related to justice or fairness and entail general and fundamental maxims of law representing the substantive values and purposes of a community.Footnote 165 Dworkin highlights the need to use the principles of fairness to ensure that individual rights are protected.Footnote 166 A key function of the principles is to translate broader policy goals into more specific standards that can used to develop rules. Islamic legal maxims (qawāʿid al-fiqh) are similar to the normative principles identified by Dworkin as they provide the standards governing different aspects of Islamic law. Whereas a few maxims provide guidelines on the methods of law-making such as custom (ʿurf) and concession (rukhṣa), some other qawāʿid include various principles that are related to the goals of efficiency and justice in contracts.
Rules in normative and positive legal theories stipulate specific notions that relate to validity and exist in an ‘all or nothing’ fashion.Footnote 167 Among the five categories of rulings in Islamic defining law (ḥukm taklīfī), the obligatory (wājib) and the prohibited (ḥarām) would belong to Dworkin’s concept of rules as these have legal force and can be adjudicated in courts. Accordingly, the legal rules of Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) have similar binary outcomes of being obligatory/non-obligatory or valid/invalid. These legal rules can be derived by using different methods depending on the strength of the links of new cases to the effective cause in the sharīʿa revealed texts.
Islamic Normative Legal Theory: An Integrated Framework
The moral underpinnings of Islamic law are entailed in the sharīʿa revealed texts and are manifest in maqāṣid and the maxims (qawāʿid). While the maqāṣid provides the broader normative policy goals and purposes of sharīʿa, the legal maxims entail specific principles reflecting legal and moral values. Most contemporary discussions on introducing ethics in Islamic law focus on the maqāṣid approach.Footnote 168 The maxims are not presented as an integral part of the legal theory and are either not used or used in an ad hoc manner in deriving rules. From a normative legal theoretical perspective, the maqāṣid approach raises a couple of issues. First, because maqāṣid represent the overall policy goals of sharīʿa, the approach is similar to the positivist legal theorists who identify normativity in terms of policies rather than principles.Footnote 169 Second, using maqāṣid as a policy objective for rulemaking is criticized for being too broad for deriving specific rules which can introduce subjectivity and speculative induction.
Dworkin’s normative theoretical approach suggests using principles for arriving at judgments in hard cases as they provide relatively more specific moral standards compared to policy goals that require broad interpretive discretion.Footnote 170 Using Dworkin’s approach would require integrating the maxims (qawāʿid) in an Islamic normative legal theoretical framework as they play an important role in translating the broader goals of maqāṣid into specific principles that then can be used to guide the development of rules utilizing different methods of uṣūl. In particular, qawāʿid reflect “substantive canons of construction” relating closely to “the structure and substance of positive law”Footnote 171 and they can be used as persuasive principles and evidence in the development of Islamic law.Footnote 172 Using the maxims as principles in rulemaking under the integrated normative approach mitigates the probabilistic nature of Islamic positive law (fiqh) derived by using different uṣūl methods independently in cases with weak links to sharīʿa revealed texts on the one hand, and minimizes the broad subjectivity used in the interpretations of maqāṣid on the other hand.
As noted, a key issue of Islamic law concerns its legitimacy or scriptural validation that relates to the degree of affinity of new rules to the sharīʿa revealed texts. In the Islamic normative legal theoretical framework, legitimacy can take the form of legality and normativity, whereby in legal legitimacy new rules are linked to the legal rules of the sharīʿa texts and in normative legitimacy rulings are derived by using the maqāṣid and maxims (qawāʿid). The new rulings linked to the legal rules of sharīʿa revealed texts would have both legal and normative legitimacy because the latter are considered to be inherently ethical.
Given the variety of new cases that can arise, their legitimacy can be discussed in light of the strength of relationships of the cases with the sharīʿa revealed texts and the application of different legal methods for rulemaking. Accordingly, the following four broad categories of cases can be identified:
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1. Clear effective cause. For cases that have a clear effective cause (ʿilla) in the sharīʿa revealed texts, the method of qiyās under uṣūl can be used to derive rules. Because the new rulings will have direct links to the rules of texts that are considered inherently moral, they would have both legal and normative legitimacy.
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2. Ambiguous or weak effective cause. In cases when the link between the new case and effective cause in sharīʿa revealed texts is weak or ambiguous, then the jurists can interpret the text in different ways. Employing the deductive method of qiyās mechanically without using other evidence from the sharīʿa is likely to result in the use of discretion that can produce rulings that are devoid of sharīʿa moral foundations. Legal legitimacy will be relatively weaker due to the new cases lacking direct references to the texts. In these cases, the use of juristic preference (istiḥsān) would be an option and decisions can be supported by other normative evidence from the sharīʿa revealed texts. In this regard, both policies/maqāṣid and principles/qawāʿid can be used to support law-making. Doing so will enhance the overall legitimacy of the rules because adding normative legitimacy will compensate for weaker legal legitimacy. Furthermore, using maxims to derive the rules under istiḥsān will limit the discretion used by scholars because their decisions will be governed by compliance with sharīʿa principles.
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3. Nonexistent effective cause. In new cases that do not have any reference or effective cause (ʿilla) in sharīʿa revealed texts, the appropriate uṣūl method to use will be maṣlaḥa mursala (unrestricted interest) which involves considering the maṣlaḥa and maqāṣid in rulemaking. However, because policies (maqāṣid) are broad in scope, the principles outlined in the maxims (qawāʿid) can be considered to develop the rules. While the maqāṣid can provide general welfare-related policy goals, maxims (qawāʿid) would ensure that specific issues relating to the goals such as welfare and justice are met. This will restrain the discretion of jurists in deriving rules because they will be guided by maqāṣid in general and qawāʿid in particular. The legitimacy of rules derived by maṣlaḥa mursala and maxims is normative because legal links to the sharīʿa revealed texts are absent.
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4. Exceptional cases. In some exceptional cases, concession (rukhṣa) can be used to temporarily abandon or dilute the accepted rules based on the maxims of necessity and hardship. As noted, the rulings for exceptional cases are conditional and expire when the necessity or difficulty ceases to exist.Footnote 173 While rulings based on concession (rukhṣa) do not have legal legitimacy as the rules of the sharīʿa revealed texts are suspended, they have normative legitimacy based on the maxims related to enhancing welfare (maṣlaḥa) and mitigating harm (mafṣada).
The Islamic normative legal theoretical perspective presented above provides a coherent framework that combines the three Islamic legal methodologies to derive rules. Specifically, the normative legal theoretical framework introduces the intermediating role of qawāʿid principles to reconcile the broad ethical policies of maqāṣid with different rulemaking methods of uṣūl. The framework provides a structure to assess the legal and normative legitimacies of Islamic positive law (fiqh) derived by using different methods. In cases with a clear effective cause, the derived rules using qiyās fulfil both legality and normative legitimacy conditions due to the virtue of their closeness to sharīʿa revealed texts.
For intermediate cases with ambiguous or weak effective causes, the method of juristic preference (istiḥsān) can be used for rulemaking. Because maqāṣid and qawāʿid are used to derive rules, they will have normative legitimacy and varying degrees of legal legitimacy. For new cases that do not have any corresponding effective cause in the sharīʿa revealed texts, the rulings derived by using unrestricted interest (maṣlaḥa mursala) that are guided by maqāṣid and qawāʿid will have normative legitimacy, but no legal legitimacy. Similarly, rules derived by concession (rukhṣa) for exceptional cases of necessities and hardships are also based on legal maxims and have normative legitimacy and no legal legitimacy. Whereas the rulings derived by using different methods under the Islamic normative legal theoretical framework will have varying degrees of legal legitimacy depending on the links of new cases to the sharīʿa revealed texts, all of them will have normative legitimacy.
Other than enhancing the legitimacy of rules derived by using uṣūl methods in cases that have weak linkages to the rulings of Sharia revealed texts, the normative legal theoretical framework reduces subjectivity and speculative interpretations that appear in the maqāṣid approach. While rationality will still exist in using the Islamic normative legal theory because the implications of maxims (qawāʿid) on rulemaking have to be interpreted, the subjectivity is expected to be much lower than in the maqāṣid approach as the use of reason is guided by ethical principles entailed in the maxims.Footnote 174 In other words, whereas the maqāṣid approach uses unbounded rationality to interpret the broader policy goals, the Islamic normative legal theory uses bounded rationality by applying the relevant maxims which enhances the moral legitimacy of the derived rules.
While the integrated Islamic normative legal theory presented uses Dworkin’s normative legal theoretical framework, they differ in a few ways. First, although the Islamic normative legal theory adopts Dworkin’s theoretical constructs of policies, principles and rules, the underlying ontological and ideological foundations of these concepts are significantly different in each of these theories. Whereas Dworkin’s legal theory represents liberal legal philosophy and notions of justice,Footnote 175 the Islamic normative legal theory is founded on existing Islamic legal theoretical paradigms and values. Thus, the Islamic normative legal theory developed in this article uses Dworkin’s analytical framework technically without adopting its underlying ideological underpinnings. Thus, the second difference that relates to the sources of law and ethics: in Dworkin’s theory, the institutions of legislature and adjudication are sources of law reflecting the will of people.Footnote 176 Similarly, the policies and principles are also determined by the legislature through a democratic process and represent “political morality.”Footnote 177 The sources of Islamic law, however, are divine and linked to the sharīʿa revealed texts (Qurʿān and Sunnah). Scholars use uṣūl methods to link the new rulings to those in the sharīʿa revealed texts, and maqāṣid and qawāʿid reflecting the policies and principles respectively are also derived from these revealed sources representing religious morality. The final difference concerns the scope of law-making. While recognizing that the legislature enacts statutes, Dworkin’s normative theory is concerned mainly with how judges acting as deputy legislators could use principles to interpret rules in disputes.Footnote 178 The Islamic normative legal theory focuses mainly on how jurists can develop new ethical laws that can also be used in the adjudication of cases.Footnote 179
Islamic Normative Legal Theory: Applications
Below I use the Islamic normative legal theoretical framework to analyze current rulings in three cases in the areas of environment, organ donation and transplant, and Islamic finance. These cases represent issues that do not have direct precedence in classical Islamic jurisprudence. The contemporary rulings on these topics are analyzed in light of the methods presented under the Islamic normative legal framework. To identify the appropriate method that can be used to derive rulings the linkage of each case to the sharīʿa texts is first determined. The integrated Islamic normative legal theory provides a framework of law-making for new cases that have weak or no links to rules in sharīʿa revealed texts and assessing their legal and normative legitimacies. Other than discussing the appropriate methods applied in these cases, the legal and normative legitimacies of the derived rulings are also assessed.
Environment
Dealing with environmental issues has become important during contemporary times due to the adverse impact of economic activities on nature and human lives and the impending climate crisis. A large body of literature discusses various aspects of how the laws and legal systems can deal with the challenges related to climate change.Footnote 180 At the global level, the multilateral environmental agreement was initiated in 1992 in the form of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and culminated in the Paris Agreement in 2015.Footnote 181 The Paris Agreement represents a legally binding international treaty to combat climate change by limiting the global average temperature increases to 1.50C above pre-industrial levels.Footnote 182 At the national level, countries are adopting policies and laws related to climate change and environmental sustainability.
Given the challenges that climate change and environmental degradation pose to natural systems and human lives, some international and national sharīʿa jurisprudential bodies have come forward with resolutions on environmental-related issues. For example, the International Islamic Fiqh Academy issued a resolution in 2009 on environmental conservation forbidding “any act or disposal that could cause harm or abuse to the environment.”Footnote 183 Similarly, the Ulama Council of Indonesia (Majelis Ulama Indonesia, widely known as the MUI) issued rulings that make protecting and conserving endangered species mandatoryFootnote 184 and prohibits “burning of forests and land that can cause damage, pollution, harm to other persons, adverse health effects, and other harmful effects.”Footnote 185 The methodologies used to derive the resolutions of the MUI on endangered species and burning forests and land are analyzed further in light of the Islamic normative theory presented above.
The first step in applying the Islamic normative theoretical framework is to explore the environmental issues in the sharīʿa revealed texts. There are numerous references to various aspects of nature and environment in the Qurʿān and Sunnah.Footnote 186 The basic premise related to nature starts with the notion that God is the creator and ultimate owner of the universe and humans should act as viceregents or trustees.Footnote 187 The teachings from sharīʿa revealed texts indicate maintaining balance, moderation, conservation, harmony and care when dealing with nature and creation.Footnote 188 Examples of verses of the Qurʿān related to nature and environment include “Eat and drink the sustenance God has provided and do not cause corruption in the land”Footnote 189 and “As for the earth, We have spread it out, set firm mountains on it, and made everything grow there in due balance.”Footnote 190 Similarly, numerous sayings of the Prophet encourage Muslims to preserve, promote and avoid misusing nature. For example, one ḥādīth (saying of the Prophet) encourages planting treesFootnote 191 and another one discourages wasting water even when it is abundantly available.Footnote 192
Although the Qurʿān and Prophetic sayings provide general ethical guidance on protecting the environment, they do not represent specific legal injunctions on the environment. Because there are no clear prohibitions on burning forests and land or protecting endangered species in the sharīʿa revealed texts, these environmental issues would fall under the ambiguous or weak effective cause category. This implies that using qiyās to derive rulings is not feasible. The appropriate method would be to use juristic preference (istiḥsān), which calls for considering the maqāṣid and applying the principles of qawāʿid to derive rulings.
Whereas protecting the environment is not one of the original maqāṣid al-sharīʿa, contemporary scholars have tried to link it to maqāṣid in two ways. First, preserving the environment is considered necessary for protecting and enhancing the five maqāṣid of faith, life, intellect, posterity, and wealth.Footnote 193 In other words, protecting the environment becomes an essential policy tool to achieve the maqāṣid. Second, there are suggestions to expand the scope of maqāṣid beyond the traditional elements and include the protection of the environment as an additional maqṣad. Given ample evidence in the sharīʿa revealed texts that call for keeping the balance and protecting the nature and environment, protecting environment can be considered as an additional maqṣid. Footnote 194 Both perspectives imply that protecting the environment is an important policy consideration in framing Islamic laws during contemporary times.
There are various qawāʿid that provide specific ethical principles that can be used to derive rulings on environmental issues. The relevant maxims relate to minimizing harm or damage (ḍarar) such as “harm has to be eliminated,” “averting harm takes precedence over achieving benefit,” “to repel public damage a private damage is preferred,” and “severe damage is made to disappear by a lighter damage.”Footnote 195
Although the resolutions of the MUI on environmental issues do not explicitly identify protecting the environment as one of the maqāṣid, they use the sharīʿa revealed texts and qawāʿid to derive rulings. The resolutions start with presenting several Qurʿānic verses and prophetic sayings on the environment and then a section identifies some relevant maxims.Footnote 196 For example, for the ruling that makes protection of endangered species mandatory the MUI identifies the following maxims: “all harms should be avoided as far as one can,” “a harm should not be rid of by bringing in another harm,” and “a specific harm should be borne to avoid a general (large-scale) harm.”Footnote 197 Similarly, in deriving the ruling that forbids the burning of forests and land, the MUI refers to the “all harmful and useless things must be abolished” and “preventing harm brought upon by an unlawful deed shall take precedent over the pursuit of benefit”Footnote 198
Because there are no specific legal rulings on protecting endangered species or forbidding burning the forests and land in the sharīʿa revealed texts, the rulings of prohibitions by MUI have weak legal legitimacy. However, the rulings have strong normative legitimacy because they are derived from the general ethical guidelines on the environment from the Qurʿān and Sunnah, the implications of the maqāṣid and principles entailed in the legal maxims.
Organ Donation and Transplant
Organ donation and transplant is an emerging issue in the area of biomedical ethics.Footnote 199 The discussions on organ transplants from an Islamic point of view are diverse and depend on various factors. For example, organ transplants can be autograft (transplanting organs or tissues in the same body) or allograft (transplanting organs or tissues from one person to another).Footnote 200 In case of allotransplant, the rulings would depend on whether the donor is alive or cadaveric in which the donor is deceased or brain dead.Footnote 201 Furthermore, there may be restrictions on the type of organs that can be donated or transplanted.Footnote 202 For example, rulings would be different for organs related to the reproductive and non-reproductive systems.Footnote 203
There are three different opinions on organ donation and transplant among contemporary Islamic scholars: prohibited, contingently permissible under conditions of necessity, and generally permitted.Footnote 204 While scholars prohibiting organ transplants link their arguments to sharīʿa revealed texts related to human dignity and ownership of the body, the camp supporting contingent permissibility uses the maxim of necessity and allows organ transplants in cases of necessities such as saving lives. Islamic jurisprudential bodies and scholars who forbid organ transplants belong mainly to the Indo-Pakistani regions. For example, in the 1960s, Mufti Muhammad Shafi from Pakistan issued a ruling forbidding organ transplants. While the Islamic Fiqh Academy of India allowed kidney transplants by a living donor, it prohibited cadaveric transplant of the organ.Footnote 205 Some jurisprudential bodies such as the International Islamic Fiqh Academy, European Council for Fatwa and Research, and Fiqh Council of North America approve cadaveric transplants of non-reproductive organs. Scholars and jurisprudential bodies who allow general permissibility apply the principle of maṣlaḥa in terms of benefits outweighing the harms to support their views.Footnote 206
An initial step in determining the appropriate legal method that can be used under the Islamic normative legal theoretical perspective would be to identify whether a similar effective cause exists in the sharīʿa revealed texts. Organ donations are relatively new practices and there is no explicit mention of these issues in the Qurʿān and Sunnah.Footnote 207 Thus, the case of organ donations and transplants would fall under the category of nonexistent effective cause, and the appropriate method to derive their rulings would be to use maṣlaḥa mursala.
Scholars arguing against organ donations, however, use the traditional methodology of qiyās and link organ donation and transplants to sharīʿa revealed texts.Footnote 208 Because various verses of the Qurʿān highlight the sanctity of humans, they argue that donating body parts violates this high status and sanctity. They assert that Islam has given humans a position of honor and dignity and that individuals do not have the right to change this status.Footnote 209 Another key conceptual issue in the arguments on organ transplants relates to the ownership of the human body. Those arguing against organ donations and transplants assert that the ultimate owner of the human body is God, and therefore humans do not have the right to donate its parts.Footnote 210 Furthermore, they also do not support the donation of organs as it mutilates human bodies.Footnote 211
Recognizing that there are no specific legal rulings regarding organ donations in the sharīʿa revealed texts, the Islamic jurisprudential bodies and scholars permitting organ transplants use the method of maṣlaḥa mursala and employ the notions of maqāṣid and qawāʿid to derive their rulings. The relevant maqāṣid for organ donation would be the protection of life and posterity.Footnote 212 The International Islamic Fiqh Academy identifies utility to the beneficiary such as remaining alive or restoring a primary bodily function, as a key determinant of allowing organ transplants.Footnote 213 However, the maqṣid of protecting posterity, which also relates to safeguarding lineage, would imply prohibiting the donation and transplanting of organs related to reproductive systems, such as sperm, testicles, fetus, uterus, and ovum.Footnote 214
The legal maxims used as principles to permit donation and transplant of non-reproductive organs include “necessity facilitates ease,” “necessities render the prohibited permissible,” “harms should be eliminated,” “in the presence of two harms the least harmful must be chosen,” and “a minor harm is tolerated for the sake of a major gain.”Footnote 215 Because the harm to the deceased donor is minimal compared to the life-saving benefit of the recipient, the maxims support the cadaver donation of organs. For example, the Fiqh Council of North America cites the maxim of removing harm to allow cadaveric donation of non-reproductive organs.Footnote 216 However, the maxim “harm cannot be offset by another harm” implies that the organ donor should not be harmed in the process of donation. Thus, vital organs such as a heart cannot be donated by a living person because it will cause the death of the donor.Footnote 217 The jurisprudential bodies and scholars permitting organ donations also recognize human dignity and conclude that organs cannot be sold as commodities for a price.Footnote 218 They also acknowledge that the ultimate owner of the body is God, but they are of the opinion that a person has legal authority over her body.Footnote 219 Accordingly, they opine that cadaveric donations have to be authorized either by the deceased before her death or by the heirs after her death or by concerned authorities in case the deceased has no heirs.Footnote 220
While the scholars prohibiting organ transplants use qiyās and link their reasonings to concepts of creation and status of human lives from sharīʿa revealed texts, there is no explicit mention of organ donation in the Qurʿān and Sunnah.Footnote 221 The relatively weak direct links to sharīʿa revealed texts imply that using qiyās to derive rulings is conjectural and likely leads to inaccurate legal rulings. From the Islamic normative legal theoretical perspective, the legal and ethical legitimacies of the rulings prohibiting organ donations are relatively weak. As indicated, the appropriate method to derive rulings would be to use maṣlaḥa mursala because there are no explicit legal rules on organ donations in the sharīʿa revealed texts. The contemporary rulings permitting organ donations and transplants using this method have weak legal legitimacy but derive normative authority as they reflect the values of maqāṣid and principles of qawāʿid. Thus, from the Islamic legal theoretical perspective, the rulings permitting organ transplants have relatively stronger normative legitimacy than the rulings prohibiting organ donations.
Islamic Finance
Islamic finance was initiated in the 1970s to provide services to Muslims who would not engage with the conventional financial sector due to their religious convictions. A key feature of Islamic finance is the use of Islamic law to structure financial products. Financial transactions are governed by the principle of permissibility (ibāḥah), which maintains that all activities are allowed except those prohibited by the sharīʿa.Footnote 222 Prohibitions in economic transactions can be broadly classified as ribā and gharar. Footnote 223 Although ribā (literally meaning increase or growth) is commonly associated with interest on loans, it has much wider implications and can take different forms. A common premise in the prohibition of ribā lies in the unequal trade of values in exchange.Footnote 224 Gharar is translated as excessive uncertainty and also implies ignorance, gambling, hazard, and fraud.Footnote 225 Prohibited gharar relates to legal ambiguities in contracts and uncertainties in the object of sale and outcomes. Given that interest-based loans are prohibited, Islamic financial institutions have developed products using various permissible contracts such as sale and leasing. Islamic finance industry has expanded globally and become systematically significant in many jurisdictions with global assets reaching US$ 3.88 trillion in 2024.Footnote 226 While the industry has grown rapidly in a relatively short period of time, it is criticized for applying sharīʿa principles in formal legalistic ways and not contributing to the ethical and social objectives of maqāṣid. Footnote 227
To understand the status of Islamic law used in financial transactions in light of the Islamic normative legal theoretical perspectives, the methodological approach related to the positive law applied in practice needs to be identified. The main approach taken by Islamic finance is to replicate conventional financial products by using multiple contracts to come up with similar risk-return features of the latter in substance.Footnote 228 This is usually done by using legal stratagems (ḥila) and eclectic methods of selection (takhayyur) and patching (talfīq) whereby opinions of past scholars from different schools that fit a product structure are chosen and/or combined.Footnote 229 The approach of using ḥila in Islamic finance has been to focus on formal legal structures, rather than substance.Footnote 230 Because the new rulings derived through eclectic ijtihād depend on the past rulings of scholars and have indirect approval from sharīʿa revealed texts through the principle of permissibility,Footnote 231 they have weak legal and normative legitimacies.
Applying the Islamic normative theoretical framework would imply using other methods to derive rules. Because the features of Islamic financial products do not have specific references in sharīʿa revealed texts, the legal framework applied in Islamic financial transactions would fall under ambiguous or weak effective cause. Thus, the appropriate methods that would be applied to develop Islamic financial products should be istiḥsān or maṣlaḥa mursala. Using these methods to derive rulings related to financial products would provide normative legitimacy as they would fulfil the maqāṣid and apply the principles of qawāʿid.
The relevant maqāṣid related to economic and financial transactions are the protection of wealth and life (livelihoods) and specific maqāṣid related to economic transactions. As indicated, Ibn Ashur identifies the maqāṣid for economic transactions as marketability, transparency, preservation, durability and justice.Footnote 232 The notion of justice in transactions is viewed in terms of balancing the implementation of rights and obligations in contracts.Footnote 233 In exchange contracts, this would involve commutative justice or equality in the values exchanged between parties and avoiding unfair exploitation.Footnote 234 Another way in which justice can be understood in financial contracts is to have a balanced distribution of risks and returns.Footnote 235
Given the maqāṣid of protecting lives and wealth and ensuring justice in economic transactions, the Islamic normative legal theoretical framework requires using principles entailed in the qawāʿid to derive rules. Several maxims apply to financial transactions. A key maxim that is relevant to evaluating transactions states “In contracts, greater weight is given to intention and meaning than words and forms.”Footnote 236 This maxim “substance over form” stresses examining the substance rather than the form in assessing the nature of contracts. Two key maxims related to justice and linking risks and return are “benefits go with liability” and “liability accompanies gain.”Footnote 237 The first maxim is based on a Prophetic saying and implies that the party enjoying the benefit of ownership of an asset in terms of returns should also bear its risks.Footnote 238 For instance, the implication of the maxim for a leasing contract is that the lessor should be responsible for any damages to the asset leased out. Rulings derived by using these legal maxims embed justice in transactions and would have strong normative legitimacy.
Although the legal legitimacy of Islamic financial products is weak due to ambiguous or weak effective cause as there are no direct references in the sharīʿa revealed texts, applying istiḥsān or maṣlaḥa mursala that considers the maqāṣid and qawāʿid in rulemaking would provide normative legitimacy. In some exceptional cases, such as necessity (ḍarūra) and legitimate commercial need (ḥāja),Footnote 239 concessions (rukhṣa) can be applied by abandoning accepted sharīʿa rules by applying the maxims “removal of hardship,” “hardship begets facility,” and “necessities render the prohibited permissible.”Footnote 240 In these cases, the rulings would have no legal legitimacy but have normative legitimacy as the maxims are used to remove hardships.
To assess the practice of Islamic finance in light of the Islamic normative theoretical framework, an example of a financial product used in the industry is examined. Because Islamic banks cannot use interest-bearing debt contracts to raise funds on the liability side, many financial institutions use an agency (wakālah) contract to do so. From a sharīʿa legal point of view, the investor owns the funds as a principal that is managed by the bank acting as an agent (wakil) for a fee. According to the maxims linking risks and returns, any profit or loss from the investments made would accrue to the investors as they own the capital.Footnote 241 However, in practice, the wakālah-based deposit is structured in a way that has the same economic substance as an interest-bearing deposit in conventional banks. To do this, an expected return (for example, 5 percent) is identified and a clause is introduced in the contract stipulating that any return above the expected level would accrue to the bank as a reward and incentive for good performance. The implication of this clause is that while the bank keeps the profit beyond the expected rate on the upside, lower returns and losses are borne by the investors in downturns. In practice, the bank usually ends up paying the client the expected return (in this case, 5 percent).
The agency-based product structure presented above may be acceptable under the principle of permissibility. However, the practice raises some ethical concerns. Under the Islamic normative theoretical framework, the moral issues of the agency-based investment product can be assessed in light of the maqāṣid and principles identified in the qawāʿid. While the relevant maqāṣid related to finance would be the protection of wealth and ensuring justice in transactions, several maxims provide more specific guidelines for rulemaking.
The maxim “substance over form” stipulates that a product should be evaluated by examining its economic substance, not its form. Using the maxim to assess the wakālah-based deposit product shows that the economic substance of the product is at best akin to an interest-based debt contract or even worse than it from the depositor or investor’s perspective. Specifically, if the bank pays the fixed expected rate to the investors, the economic substance of the contract becomes similar to an interest-bearing loan, which is prohibited by sharīʿa and thereby violates the legal legitimacy. However, the economic substance of the product structure is worse than an interest-bearing loan for the investor if the stipulations of the agency contract make the investors bear the downside risks but not benefit from the upside gains due to capped returns. In either of these cases, the product violates the maxims linking risks and returns that govern justice in financial transactions.
The example of the practice of Islamic finance highlights the differences in applying Islamic law positively and normatively. While the clause of capped returns as incentives for banks in agency contracts may be acceptable from a positive legal perspective based on the principle of permissibly, the structure creates an anomaly when viewed from the normative legal perspective. Specifically, the product lacks normative legitimacy as it contradicts the legal maxims that link returns to risks, which makes it unjust for the investors. Furthermore, the maxim for rulemaking requires assessing the substance of contracts to ensure that justice prevails in financial transactions. This implies that the stipulation capping returns at an expected rate cannot be added as a feature of the product and the investors should enjoy the benefits of upside gains and also bear the losses if they occur. Applying the Islamic normative theoretical perspective would ensure justice in contracts and the product structure will have both legal and normative legitimacies.
Conclusion
The urge for renewal and reform of Islamic law and the debate on how Islamic legal theory can respond to changing times has been going on since the Middle Ages. The dominant legal theory of uṣūl al-fiqh has been criticized for lacking normativity because it focuses on technicalities and literalism. Some scholars responded to the limitations of the text-based uṣūl by proposing the purposive methodological approach of maqāṣid al-sharīʿa. While the maqāṣid approach represents the normative policy values of sharīʿa and is deemed to be more dynamic and relevant for changing times and contexts, it is critiqued for identifying the goals too broadly, which makes developing specific rules speculative due to the use of human and rational reasoning. Although legal maxims (qawāʿid) provide specific principles reflecting the normative values of sharīʿa that can be used in deriving rules, they have not been used extensively in law-making.
Recognizing the limitations of the dominant methods of text-based uṣūl and maqāṣid to derive laws in a dynamic context during contemporary times, this article presents a coherent theoretical framework that integrates the three key Islamic theoretical methods of juridical theory (uṣūl), legal maxims (qawāʿid) and purposes (maqāṣid). This is done by drawing on Dworkin’s normative legal theoretical model, whereby he uses the notions of rules, principles, and policies. Akin to Dworkin’s legal theory, the integrated Islamic normative theoretical model uses qawāʿid as principles to form a bridge between broad policy goals of maqāṣid and specific rules derived by uṣūl methods. In this framework, the principles of legal maxims (qawāʿid) and the policy goals of maqāṣid play an important role in introducing normativity in rulemaking. The normative legal theory rooted in Islamic legal methodologies can be used as a framework for developing Islamic law for emerging and contemporary issues that do not have precedence in classical Islamic jurisprudence.
The case studies show that while rulings on environmental issues have weak legal legitimacy, they have normative legitimacy as they are based on moral values and principles reflected in the maqāṣid and qawāʿid, respectively. Organ donations and transplants are relatively recent issues and are not specifically mentioned in the sharīʿa revealed texts, thus implying weak legal legitimacy. The opinion that permits cadaveric organ transplant and donation reflects a better ruling from the Islamic normative legal theoretical perspective as it provides normative legitimacy, which the prohibition opinion does not. The rulings in Islamic finance draw their legal legitimacy indirectly by avoiding the prohibitions of interest-based financing (ribā) and excessive uncertainty (gharar). However, the application of positive Islamic law in structuring Islamic financial products can weaken legal legitimacy and also lack normative legitimacy as they do not consider the ethical values entailed in the maqāṣid and qawāʿid. Applying the Islamic normative legal theoretical perspective would provide Islamic financial products with both legal and normative legitimacies.
The integrated Islamic normative legal theory I offer highlights a few key issues related to Islamic law and legal methodologies. First, the Islamic normative legal theoretical framework clarifies the roles of using revelation and reason in framing Islamic law. Whereas it is difficult to use the juridical theoretical method (uṣūl) in cases that do not have corresponding effective causes in the revealed sources, the purposive maqāṣid approach is criticized for being speculative due to the expansive use of rationality. Other than identifying the circumstances in which revelation and reason can be used, the integrated Islamic normative legal theory provides a framework for using reason that is guided by maqāṣid and maxims (qawāʿid) that enhance the legitimacy of derived rules.
Second, the normative legal theory contributes to the debate on Islamic law and ethics by distinguishing between sharīʿa revealed texts and Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh). While the sharīʿa revealed texts are considered to be inherently moral, the ethicality of Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) can vary across cases depending on the linkages of the new rulings to the sharīʿa revealed texts and the methods used in law-making. The normative theoretical framework integrates uṣūl methods with maqāṣid and qawāʿid to introduce ethics in Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh). Finally, the integrated theoretical framework distinguishes between legal and ethical legitimacy. While the extent of legal legitimacy of new rulings can vary across different cases depending on the links to rules in sharīʿa revealed texts, their normative legitimacy would depend on the extent to which the maqāṣid and qawāʿid are used in law-making, particularly in cases that have weak or no links to sharīʿa revealed texts. The Islamic normative legal theory asserts that using maqāṣid and qawāʿid as policies and principles respectively to guide law-making can enhance the overall sharīʿa legitimacy of rules and ensure the moral character of Islamic law.
Acknowledgments and Citation Guide
I thank the journal editor and anonymous reviewers for providing constructive comments and feedback, which significantly improved the article. I have no competing interests to declare. This article is cited according to the Chicago Manual of Style, 18th edition.