Focus and Scope
At-Tasyri: Journal of Islamic Law and Sharia Economics publishes scholarly works by academics and practitioners in the field of Islamic economic law. This journal welcomes research on Islamic economic law using various research methodologies. Articles can be written in English or Indonesian. The publication frequency is twice a year: January and July. Selected areas of study include:
1) Islamic Economic Law
Normative foundations, principles, and application of Islamic economic law in contemporary markets. Contracts and transactions (bay', ijarah, murabahah, salam, istishna', musyarakah, mudarabah, wakalah, kafalah, hiwalah, rahn), Hybrid Contracts, Sharia compliance, governance, and Islamic business ethics, Consumer protection; Sharia-compliant dispute resolution and arbitration, harmonization with national laws (civil law, banking, capital markets, taxation, data protection).
Legal aspects of the halal industry (certification, assurance, logistics).
Keywords: Sharia law, contracts, transactions, halal regulations, governance.
2) Islamic Banking and Finance
Legal issues, regulations, governance, and risk management in Islamic financial institutions. Banking: Sharia governance, Sharia Supervisory Board, liquidity and risk management, supervision. Non-bank finance: Sharia fintech (P2P, e-money), finance companies, Sharia cooperatives. Sharia capital markets: Sharia stocks, sukuk, Sharia mutual funds. Sharia takaful and mutual funds. Sharia accounting and auditing (AAOIFI/IFRS), sustainability and ESG disclosure.
Keywords: Islamic banking, sukuk, Islamic fintech, takaful, capital market law
3) Zakat, Infaq, Sadaqah, and Waqf (ZISWAF)
Legal framework, governance model, digital transformation, and impact assessment of Islamic social finance. Positive law and jurisprudence of zakat and waqf; BAZNAS/BWI and regional regulations. Institutional design (BAZNAS/LAZ/naẓir), accountability, audit, transparency. Zakat-tax compliance. Productive waqf, cash waqf, CWLS, CWLD, asset development. Digital platforms (collection/distribution), open finance, QRIS. Impact evaluation on poverty, MSMEs, education, and health.
Keywords: zakat law, waqf governance, Islamic philanthropy, social finance, cash waqf
4) Contemporary Muamalah Law
Modern transactions and contractual arrangements through muamalah fiqh and national law. E-commerce & smart contracts; buy now pay later; Dropshipping/marketplaces. Platforms and the gig economy (ride-hailing, couriers, freelancers). Franchising, retail partnerships, leasing, factoring, Islamic securitization. Intellectual property, data/privacy, consumer protection. Halal supply chains and international trade (LC, Islamic trade financing). Online dispute resolution (ODR) and electronic evidence.
Keywords: e-commerce law, smart contracts, halal trade, consumer protection, ODR
5) Fatwas, Regulations, and Public Policy
Critical analysis of DSN-MUI fatwas, national policies, and financial regulations, including a comparative perspective. Fatwa issuance methodology (uṣūl, tarjīḥ, maqāṣid) and legal implications. Regulatory impact assessment in the Islamic finance sector. Alignment with international standards (AAOIFI, IFSB, IOSCO). Comparative regulatory frameworks (e.g., Malaysia, GCC, UK, Indonesia). Implementation, compliance, law enforcement, and remediation.
Keywords: Sharia fatwas, regulatory compliance, policy analysis, DSN-MUI, AAOIFI
6) Digitalization and Innovation in Islamic Economics
Financial technology and digital transformation consistent with Sharia principles. CBDC (Digital Rupiah), tokenization, blockchain for zakat/waqf. Open banking & APIs, digital onboarding and e-KYC, Sharia ERP. Islamic insurtech, Sharia robo-advisory, Sharia P2P.
Regtech and suptech for Sharia compliance. Cybersecurity, data protection, and AI ethics (ḍarar/maṣlaḥah).
Keywords: blockchain waqf, digital rupiah, regtech, Islamic fintech, AI ethics
7) Islamic Economic Jurisprudence and Comparative Law
Advancing theory in Islamic economic jurisprudence and comparative studies across schools of thought and legal systems. Methodology: Maqāṣid, Maṣlaḥah Mursalah, Sadd al-Dhara’i, Istiḥsān. Tarjiḥ/Ta‘līl in contemporary economic law. Comparative jurisprudence across schools of thought (Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi‘i, Hanbali). Comparative analysis with national law and civil/common law systems. Codification and harmonization within a national framework.
Keywords: Maqāshid al-Shariah, comparative jurisprudence, harmonization, Islamic legal theory, civil law
General Restrictions
The manuscript should demonstrate a clear connection to Islamic law and/or economics. Purely theological discussions without legal or economic implications are beyond the scope of the journal.




