Abstract
This paper analyzes criminal procedure and evidentiary standards for sexual offenses in Islam, detailing the sources of Islamic laws in general andthe laws of privacy in particular— including slander, and adultery. The particular focus is an examination of the evidentiary process in Islamic law, called Shari’a, including burdens of proof and punishments for sexual offenses. By compiling summaries by Shari’a juridical experts, this article encapsulates current consensus, even as it recognizes that the Islamic legal system is a moralizing force because Islam encompasses all aspects of individual existence. The article focuses on the Sunni school of thought because it has the largest following, though even Sunni adherents are not monolithic in their beliefs. The article reviews the extant literature that establishes the basis for the Islamic legal structure, locates sexual offenses within the general field of Islamic laws on privacy and slander, details the burdens of proof for various sexual offenses and lists punishments for each. This paper explains Islamic evidentiary standards for sexual offenses. The Islamic community is a religio-political community called Ummah: there is no bifurcation between the secular and religious domains as is the norm in Western cultures. Islam encompasses all aspects of life, refusing individual compartmentalization. The function of law is to protect individual rights within the framework of the cherished ideals of Islam; thus, the Islamic legal system is a moralizing force. Before discussing sexual offenses, it will be appropriate to shed some light on the sources of laws in Islam, acknowledging that there are different schools of thought within Islam as a whole. The focus throughout will be on the Sunni school of thought, which has the largest following, although not even the Sunni sect is monolithic in all its beliefs; for example, there are four Sunni sub-sects: Hanafi, Schafei, Maliki, and Hanabali. This paper presents information specific to the high-consensus area of beliefs of these four sub-sects, or what is generally regarded as the Sunni school of Islamic thought. In order to fully comprehend sexual offenses in Islam, it will be appropriate to view them within the context of Islamic laws on privacy and slander. The Islamic legal system is specific and hierarchical, stemming from the Qur’an itself, and well summarized by Sanad (1991: 38-39)

Fida Mohammad, Richard Lee. (2015) Evidentiary Standards for Sexual Offenses in Islam, Pakistan Journal of Criminology, Volume-07, Issue-1.
  • Views 496
  • Downloads 42

Article Details

Volume
Issue
Type
Language