Publications of Lena Salaymeh
All genres
Monograph (1)
Monograph
The Beginnings of Islamic Law: Late Antique Islamicate Legal Traditions. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2016), XIII + 242 pp.
Collected Edition (1)
Collected Edition
Der Orient: Imaginationen in deutscher Sprache. Wallstein Verlag; Minerva Institut für deutsche Geschichte Universität Tel Aviv, Göttingen (2017), 237 pp.
Contribution to a Collected edition (5)
Contribution to a Collected edition
Goldziher dans le rôle du bon orientaliste. Les méthodes de l'impérialisme intellectuel. In: The Territories of Philosophy in Modern Historiography, pp. 89 - 103 (Eds. König-Pralong, C.; Meliadò, M.; Radeva, Z.). Brepols Publishers, Turnhout (2019)
Contribution to a Collected edition
Legal traditions of the ‘Near East’: the pre-Islamic context. In: Routledge Handbook of Islamic law, pp. 275 - 285 (Eds. Abou El Fadl, K.; Ahmad, A. A.; Hassan, S. F.). Routledge, New York (2019)
Contribution to a Collected edition
Historical research on Islamic law. In: The Oxford Handbook of Legal History, pp. 757 - 776 (Eds. Dubber, M. D.; Tomlins, C.). Oxford University Press, Oxford (2018)
Contribution to a Collected edition
Salaymeh, L.; Schwartz, Y.; Shahar, G.). Wallstein Verlag; Minerva Institut für deutsche Geschichte Universität Tel Aviv, Göttingen (2017)
Deutscher Orientalismus und Identitätspolitik: Das Beispiel Ignaz Goldziher. In: Der Orient: Imaginationen in deutscher Sprache, pp. 140 - 157 (Eds.
Contribution to a Collected edition
Juvenile justice in Muslim-majority states. Chap. 6. In: Juvenile justice in global perspective, pp. 249 - 287 (Eds. Zimring, F. E.; Langer, M.; Tanenhaus, D. S.). NYU Press, New York (2015)
Contribution to a Festschrift (1)
Contribution to a Festschrift
Temporalities of marriage: medieval Jewish and Islamic legal debates. In: Talmudic transgressions: engaging the work of Daniel Boyarin, pp. 201 - 239. Brill, Leiden (2017)
Journal Article (13)
Journal Article
Droit comparé décolonial – un début conceptuel. Revue de droit international et de droit comparé, pp. 357 - 384 (2023)
Journal Article
86, pp. 166 - 188 (2022)
Decolonial Comparative Law: A Conceptual Beginning. Rabels Zeitschrift für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht
Journal Article
69, pp. 136 - 167 (2021)
Comparing Islamic and International Laws of War: Orthodoxy, ‘Heresy,’ and Secularization in the Category of Civilians. The American Journal of Comparative Law
Journal Article
41, pp. 431 - 458 (2021)
Religion is Secularised Tradition: Jewish and Muslim Circumcisions in Germany. Oxford Journal of Legal Studies
Journal Article
Traduction décoloniale: contre la colonialité dans la conversion séculière du droit islamique en “charia”. Clio@Themis, pp. 1 - 25 (2021)
Journal Article
5, pp. 250 - 277 (2021)
Decolonial Translation: Destabilizing Coloniality in Secular Translations of Islamic Law. Journal of Islamic Ethics
Journal Article
17, pp. 97 - 134 (symposium issue edited by Hocine Benkheira) (2019)
Imperialist Feminism and Islamic Law. Hawwa – Journal of Women of the Middle East and the Islamic World
Journal Article
41 (2), pp. 311 - 345 (2016)
Tunisia’s ‘revolutionary’ lawyers: political mobilization and professional autonomy. Law & Social Inquiry
Journal Article
23 (4), pp. 333 - 367 (2016)
Taxing citizens: socio-legal constructions of late antique Muslim identity. Islamic Law and Society
Journal Article
2 (1), pp. 153 - 172 (2015)
‘Comparing’ Jewish and Islamic legal traditions: between disciplinarity and critical historical jurisprudence. Critical Analysis of Law, New Historical Jurisprudence
Journal Article
63 (4), pp. 640 - 646 (2014)
Commodifying ‘Islamic law’ in the U.S. legal academy. Journal of Legal Education
Journal Article
4 (1), pp. 19 - 63 (2014)
Every law tells a story: orthodox divorce in Jewish and Islamic legal histories. UC Irvine Law Review
Journal Article
26 (3), pp. 521 - 544 (2008)
Early Islamic legal-historical precedents: prisoners of war. Law and History Review Working Paper (1)
Working Paper
Comparing Islamic and International Laws of War: Orthodoxy, ‘Heresy,’ and Secularization in the Category of Civilians. Max Planck Private Law Research Paper No. 19/22 (2019), 39 pp.