ABSTRACT

This book presents a comparative analysis of the judiciary in the Islamic, Jewish and Zoroastrian legal systems. It compares postulations of legal theory to legal practice in order to show that social practice can diverge significantly from religious and legal principles. It thus provides a greater understanding of the real functions of religion in these legal systems, regardless of the dogmatic positions of the religions themselves. The judiciary is the focus of the study as it is the judge who is obliged to administer to legal texts while having to consider social realities being sometimes at variance with religious ethics and legal rules deriving from them. This book fills a gap in the literature examining Islamic, Jewish and Zoroastrian law and as such will open new possibilities for further studies in the field of comparative law. It will be a valuable resource for those working in the areas of comparative law, law and religion, law and society, and legal anthropology.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

part |40 pages

Theory

chapter |28 pages

Historical Overview

chapter |10 pages

Legal Theory

part |157 pages

Practice

chapter |61 pages

Institutions

chapter |11 pages

The Judge and the Litigants

chapter |44 pages

The Judge and Jurisprudence

chapter |23 pages

The Judge and Society