Hossein Modarressi

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Professor Hossein Modarressi, a leading Muslim jurist, was born in Qum, Iran. He attended the Islamic seminary at Qum where he received a complete traditional Islamic education in Islamic philosophy, theology and law, ending with a certificate of ijtihad, the highest degree in Islamic religious tradition. He also taught there for many years before pursuing his secular education which ended in 1982 with a Ph.D. from Oxford University. He has been a professor at Princeton University since 1983 where he is Bayard Dodge Professor of Near Eastern Studies. He has simultaneously been Golestaneh Fellow at St. Antoy’s College, Oxford since 1988, and a Senior Research Scholar at the School of International and Public Affairs of Columbia University since 1990. He has also occasionally taught at other institutions such as Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales (Paris), Yale Law School and Harvard where he was the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Visiting Professor of Law at Harvard Law School in 2007.

He is a prolific author of some thirty books and many articles in English, Arabic and Persian. His books in English include Kharaj in Islamic Law (London 1983), An Introduction to Shi'i Law (London 1984), Crisis and Consolidation in the Formative Period of Shi'ite Islam (Princeton, 1993), and Tradition and Survival, a Bibliographical Survey of Early Shi’ite Literature (Oxford, 2003).


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Representative publications:

Kharaj in Islamic Law, London 1983.

An Introduction to Shi'i Law, London 1984 . Editor: al-Hakim al-Jishumi, Risalat Iblis ila ikhwanih al-manahis, Beirut, 1994 (revised edition).

Zamin dar fiqh-i Islami (Land in Islamic Law), 2 vols., Tehran, 1983-84.

Crisis and Consolidation in the Formative Period of Shi'ite Islam, Princeton, 1993.

"Some Recent Analyses of the Concept of Majaz in lslamic Jurisprudence", Journal of the American Oriental Society, 106 (1986).

"Early Debates on the Integrity of the Qur'an," Studia Islamica, 77 (1983).

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