THE JUDICIAL SYSTEM OF KAZAKH BEYS IN CENTRAL ASIA: SHARI’A AND CUSTOMARY LAW
Smanov D. Adilbayev A. Abdukhalik R. Kalmakhan Y.
2025George Fox University Murdock Learning Resource Center
Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe
2025#45Issue 9171 - 186 pp.
This study examines the judicial practices of Kazakh beys in 18th–19th century Central Asia, emphasizing their application of Islamic fiqh alongside traditional Kazakh customary law (adat). In a decentralized and nomadic society, beys acted as hybrid legal authorities, integrating Shari’a principles – such as ‘adl (justice), maslaha (public interest), and ijtihad (independent reasoning) with local customs to resolve disputes over property, family matters, and blood feuds. Through historical-legal analysis of oral traditions, archival documents, and ethnographic accounts, the research demonstrates how beys preserved Islamic legal norms while adapting them to practical realities, creating a dynamic model of legal pluralism. Comparative insights with Ottoman, Mughal, and West African legal systems further illuminate the distinctiveness of Kazakh jurisprudence. This study contributes to understanding the flexibility of Islamic law in frontier societies and the epistemological and moral foundations of non-centralized judicial authority.
Central Asia , customary law , fiqh , kazakh beys , Shari’a law
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Egyptian University of Islamic Culture «Nur-Mubarak», Saryagash Medrese College (OQO)., Kazakhstan
Egyptian University of Islamic Culture “Nur-Mubarak,”, Kazakhstan
Egyptian University of Islamic Culture «Nur-Mubarak»
Egyptian University of Islamic Culture “Nur-Mubarak
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Книга Публикация научной статьи Волощук 2026 Book Publication of a scientific article 2026