Siyasah Shar'iyah or the Policies of Islamic Government

Introduction Siyasah shar'iyah is a broad doctrine of Islamic law which authorizes the ruler to determine the manner in which the Shari'ah should be administered. The ruler may accordingly take discretionary measures, enact rules and initiate policies as he deems are in the interest of go...

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Autor principal: Mohamad Hashim Kamali
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: International Institute of Islamic Thought 1989
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/c091e02d20f142268c36e0ab12b50118
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Sumario:Introduction Siyasah shar'iyah is a broad doctrine of Islamic law which authorizes the ruler to determine the manner in which the Shari'ah should be administered. The ruler may accordingly take discretionary measures, enact rules and initiate policies as he deems are in the interest of good government, provided that no substantive principle of the Shari'ah is violated thereby. The discretionary powers of the ruler under siyasah shar'iyah are particularly extensive in the field of criminal law. The head of state and those who are in charge of public affairs, the 'ulu al amr, may thus decide on rules and procedures as they deem appropriate in order to discover truth and to determine guilt. With regard to the substantive law of crimes, too, the 'ulu al amr have powers to determine what behavior constitutes an offense and what punishment is to be applied in each case. Many observers have expressed concern over the wide discretionary powers that rulers and judges enjoy under siyasah shar'iyah. It is suggested that siyasah, as such, defies effective control, and it is open to abuse, which would ultimately undermine the ideals of justice under the rule of law. One observer has thus considered siyasah as "direct negation of what may be regarded as the second essential implication of the idea of the rule of law in a secular system- namely, the principle that the sovereign must not possess any arbitrary power over the subject." According to another critic, siyasah has enabled the Islamic ruler to enact legislation, especially in the field of criminal law, under the guise of "administrative regulations." But in effect, the ruler enacted independent legislation in such areas as taxation, police matters, and the administration of justice, in general, which often interferred with, or severely circumscribed, the Shari'ah. Penalties imposed at the discretion of the ruler or the judge are known as ra'z'irat. As a branch of siyasah, ta'zir (lit. deterence) must differ according to the nature of the offense and the particular circumstances of the offender. The judge may thus determine the punishment of ta'zir in each case according to his own observations and personal ijtihad. It has been suggested that the individual in such a system is exposed to official abuse against which he has no effective means of protecting himself ...