Rating: Not rated
Tags: Economics, Islam, Lang:en
Summary
This is the third book of the series of Notes on Islamic
Economics. It studies the Islamic finance and banking part of
Islamic economics in eighteen chapters.
** Monzer Kahf has a strong training and knowledge of Islamic
Jurisprudence (Fiqh) and Islamic Studies. He got his Ph.D. in
Economics at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, USA He was
director of finance at the Islamic Society of North America in
Plainfield, Indiana (1975 – 1981) and then he went to
private business in New York (1981 – 1985) working as
financial and investment consultant. He then worked as research
economist from 1985 to 1989, head of Research Division from
1989 to 1991 and senior research economist at Islamic Research
and Training Institute (IRTI) of the Islamic Development Bank
(IDB) in Jeddah (Saudi Arabia) from 1991 to 1999. From 2004 to
2005 he was professor: Islamic Economics and Banking in the
graduate program of Islamic economics and banking, School of
Shari’ah, Yarmouk University, Jordan. He wrote 35 books
and booklets in English and Arabic, on Islamic banking and
finance, Islamic economics, Zakah, Awqaf, including some which
have become the standard reference manuals in the field. Some
of Dr. Kahf's books are translated to Indonesian, Turkish,
Russian and Korean languages. He wrote more than 100 articles,
in English and Arabic, on Islamic finance and economics,
Islamic public and private finance, Islamic banking, Zakah,
Awqaf, including entries for the Oxford Encyclopedia of the
Modern Islamic World. Recently he completed two landmarks of
his works; 1) four books under the title of Notes on Islamic
Economics: Theories and Institutions, the Third Charitable
Sector , Islamic Finance and Banking and Public Finance,
Economic Policy and Development and, 2) two Books on Islamic
Finance Contracts (English) and Fundamentals of Islamic Finance
(Arabic). Monzer is very active in associations, he is a
founding member of the International Association of Islamic
Economics, founding member of Association of Muslim Social
Scientists of the United States of Canada, and he was part of
the American Economic Association. He won from the President of
Syria Award for the best University Graduating Student in 1962
and lately in 2001 he won the IDB Prize for Islamic
Economics.
chapter 1 foundation of islamic finance
chapter 2 principles of islamic finance
chapter 3 introduction to islamic finance contracts
chapter 4 overview of islamic finance contracts
chapter 5 characteristics of islamic finance
chapter 6 maqasid al shari’ah in the prohibition of riba
chapter 7 islamic financial intermediation
chapter 8 comparison of islamic finance with conventional
finance
chapter 9 islamic banking and development
chapter 10 success factors of islamic banks
chapter 11 the rise of a power alliance of wealth and
shari’ah scholarship
chapter 12strategic trends in islamic banking and finance
chapter 13 risk management in islamic banking
chapter 14innovation in liquidity management instruments
chapter 15sukuk: islamic alternative to bonds
chapter 16service sukuk for financing public utilities
chapter 17cooperative micro finance: an islamic approach
chapter 18ethical values in conventional and islamic
financeAbout the Author