2018
DOI: 10.1111/lasr.12352
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Seeing Like an Islamic State: Shari‘a and Political Power in Sudan

Abstract: Islamic law, or shari‘a, has been incorporated into the legal systems of many states. In much of the existing literature, this process is understood as part of the colonial and postcolonial state's attempt to render law legible—that is, codified, standardized, and abstract. In this article, I show how some state actors chose to move in the opposite direction, actively discouraging the transformation of shari‘a into a formal and codified system of law. Using the case of colonial and postcolonial Sudan, I argue … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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