Journal of Islamic Studies

The Journal of Islamic Studies is a peer-reviewed academic journal for the field of Islamic studies. The journal was founded in 1990 at the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies and is published by Oxford University Press.[1] It is indexed by the ATLA Religion Database, the International Bibliography of the Social Sciences, the British Humanities Index, and EBSCO Historical Abstracts.[2][3][4][5] The editor is Farhan Ahmad Nizami of Magdalen College, Oxford.[6] In the first volume, the journal was introduced in an editorial by Nizami as having the goal of:

"...promoting the diffusion and discussion of research findings in several disciplines, to encourage a more informed understanding of various branches of learning which concern themselves with Islam. This comprehensive approach reflects the view that the Islamic tradition is better understood and appreciated within a framework of what French historians might call 'total history'."[7][8]

Journal of Islamic Studies
DisciplineIslamic studies
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
History1990–present
Publisher
FrequencyTriannually
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4J. Islam. Stud. (Oxf.)
Indexing
ISSN0955-2340 (print)
1471-6917 (web)
Links

Notes

  1. Bennett, Clinton; Contributors (2013). "Resources". In Bennett; Clinton (eds.). The Bloomsbury Companion to Islamic Studies. p. 315. ISBN 9781441138125.
  2. ATLA Religion Database Title List (Accessed June 27, 2014).
  3. Title List - International Bibliography of the Social Sciences Archived 2019-07-20 at the Wayback Machine (Accessed June 27, 2014).
  4. British Humanities Index - Current Serials Source List (Accessed June 27, 2014).
  5. Historical Abstracts Database Coverage List (Accessed June 27, 2014).
  6. Journal of Islamic Studies | Editorial Board (Accessed June 27, 2014).
  7. Nizami, Farhan Ahmad (1990). "Editorial". Journal of Islamic Studies. 1 (1): 1–s–1. doi:10.1093/jis/1.1.1-s.
  8. See Nouvelle histoire for the concept of 'total history'.
gollark: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/37/UK-Government-Expenditure-2016-17.jpg
gollark: I think if people were allowed to directly choose that breakdown, they would focus on the most politically-salient-to-them things, which for a lot of people *is* probably going to be stuff like "public order and safety", "defence" and whatever (remember, the country voted in favour of Brexit), and probably dismiss things like transport and industry and whatever.
gollark: So apparently government money is spent on this stuff.
gollark: Please hold on while I consult the UK government spending breakdown.
gollark: Okay.
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