Вы находитесь на странице: 1из 10

ISLAMIC STUDIES BIBLIOGRAPHY

Abdullah, Abdul Rahman. Guidelines for Raising Children. Riyadh, Saudi Arabia: Darussalam, 1999.

Abdullah, Muhammad S. Muslim Religious Education in the Federal Republic of Germany: the Qur’an
School Debate. Birmingham, England: Center for the Study of Islam and Christian-Muslim
Relations, Selly Oak Colleges, 1979.

Abu-Laban, Sharon McIrvin. “Intergenerational Transmission of Islamic Belief: Immigrant Families in


North America.” In Contact between Cultures Vol 1, edited by Amir Harrah, 353-359.
Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 1992.

Adil, Mohammad Shoaib. “Islamic Rights of Children.” Hamdard Islamicus 22 (April-June 1999): 90-
91.

Ahmed, Rashid and Afzal Hoosen Elias. Care and Upbringing of Children. Benoni, India: A.H. Elias,
1999.

Ahsan, Muhammad. The Children’s Book of Islam Part 2. Leicester, England: Islamic Foundation, 1993.

--. “The Twenty-First Century and the Role of the Muslim World in Promotion of Global Peace.”
Islamic Quarterly 46, no. 1 (2002): 53-77.

Aijaz, S. Zakir. Muslim Children: How to Bring Up? Karachi, Pakistan: International Islamic Publishers,
1989.

Ali, Shaheen Sardar and Baela Jamil. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, Islamic
Law and Pakistan Legislation: A Comparative Study. Peshawar, Pakistan: Educational
Computing Services, 1995.

Al-Minawi, Kawther M. The Child Rights in Islam. Riyadh: Dar al-Amal Publishing House, 1993.

Al-Zeera, Zahra. Wholeness and Holiness in Education: An Islamic Perspective. Kuala Lampur:
International Institute of Islamic Thought, 2001.

Atiola, Imran Adewale. Psychology of Development of a Child: an Islamic Point of View Essential for
All. Ibadan, Nigeria: Al-Wajud Printers & Co., 1990.

Azami, Iqbal Ahmad. Muslim Manner: A Guide for Parents and Educators of Muslim Children.
Leicester, England: UK Islamic Academy, 1990.

Barazangi, Nimat Hafez. “The Education of North American Muslim Parents and Children: Conceptual
Change as a Contribution to Islamization of Education.” American Journal of Islamic Social
Sciences 7 (1990): 385-402.

---. “Islamic Education in the United States and Canada: Conception and Practice of the Islamic
Belief System.” In Muslims of America, 157-174. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991

---. “Parents and Youth: Perceiving and Practicing Islam in North America.” In Muslim Families in
North America, edited by Earle Waugh, 132-147. Edmonton, Canada: University of Albert Press,
1991.

Updated November 2005 1


Bargach, Jamila. Orphans of Islam: Family, Abandonment, and Secret Adoption in Morocco. Lanham,
MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002.

Bartels, Edien. “ ‘Dutch Islam’: Young People, Learning, and Integration.” Current Sociology 48, no. 4
(2000): 59-73.

Bassiouni, Cherif. Introduction to Islam. New York: Rand McNally, 1988.

---. Introduction to the UN Resolution and Declaration of Basic Principles of Justice for Victims of
Crime and Abuse of Power, Protection of Victims. 7 Nouvelles Etudes Pénales, 1988.

Bassiouni, Cherif and Marcia McCormick. Sexual Violence: An Invisible Weapon of War in the Former
Yugoslavia. Occasional Paper # 1, International Human Rights Law Institute, DePaul University,
1996.

Bassiouni, Cherif and Shiel Thecla. Youth and the Law. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin, 1973.

Bassiouni, Cherif and S. Yamani, ed and trans. The European Human Right Conventions. Council of
Europe, Strasbourg, France and Dar-ilm lil-Malayan, 1989.

Bassiouni, Cherif, M.S. Dakkak and A. Wazir, eds. 1 Human Rights: International and Regional
Instruments. Dar-ilm lil-Malayan, 1988.

---. 2 Human Rights: Selected Studies. Dar-ilm lil-Malayan, 1988.

---. 3 Human Rights: Selected Studies. Dar-ilm lil-Malayan, 1988.

Beshir, Ekram, and Mohamed Rida Beshir. Meeting the Challenge of Parenting in the West: An Islamic
Perspective. Beltsville, MD: Amana Publications, 2000.

---. Muslim Teens: Today’s Worry, Tomorrow’s Hope: A Practical Guide. Beltsville, MD: Amana
Publications, 2001.

---. Parenting Skills: Based on the Quran and Sunna, with Practical Examples for Various Ages.
Beltsville, MD: Amana Publications, 2004.

Bin Faiz, Abu Merboob. Rearing Children and Islam. Riverside, CA: Fatima Publication Co., 1992.

Borrmans, Maurice. “Islamic Law Concerning the Family.” Pro Mundi Vita Bulletin 80 (1980): 1-24.

Bouhdiba, Abdelwahab. “The Child and the Mother in Arab-Muslim Society." In Psychological
Dimensions of Near Eastern Studies, edited by L. Carl Brown. Princeton, NJ: Darwin Press,
1977.

Bowen, Donna Lee and Evelyn A. Early. Everyday Life in the Muslim Middle East. Bloomington, IN:
Indiana University Press, 1993.

Brooks, Gevaldire. “Teenage Infidels Hanging Out: In Hightops and Jeans, Iranian Youths are Quietly
Subverting their Parents’ Revolution.” New York Times Magazine 30 (April 1995): 44, 46.

Brouwer, L. “Binding Religion: Moroccan and Turkish Runaway Girls.” In Islam in Dutch Society, 75-
89. Kampen: Kok, 1992.

Updated November 2005 2


Bruce, Ray. Islam through the Eyes of Muslim Children. London: Christian Education Movement Video,
1984.

Chaudhry, Saida. We are Muslim Children: Songs and Verses for Muslim Girls and Boys. Indianapolis,
IN: American Trust Publications, 1993.

Cragg, Kenneth. “‘Each Other’s Face’: Some Thoughts on Muslim-Christian Colloquy Today.” Mulism
World 45 (April 1955): 172-182.

Dahir, Mubarak S. “Not A Prayer—A Muslim Boy's School Days in the Bible Belt.” Church & State 48
(March 1995): 68-69.

Dasgupta, Shamita Das, ed. Patchwork Shawl: Chronicles of South Asian Women in America. New
Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1998.

Davis, Douglas A. and Susan S. Davis. Adolescence in a Moroccan Town: Making Social Sense. New
Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1989.

Diwan, Paras. Muslim Law in Modern India. Faridabad, India: Allahabad Law Agency, 2000.

Diyab, Mahmud. Ahzan Madina: Tifl fi al-hayy al-'Arabi. (A City's Sorrows: A Child in the Arab
Quarter.) Cairo: Al-Hay'a Al-Misriyya al-'Amma lil-Kitab, 1971.

Ebadi, Shirin. The Rights of the Child: a Study on Legal Aspects of Children's Rights in Iran. Tehran,
Iran: UNICEF, 1994.

Eck, Diana L. “Muslims in America: Forming the Next Generation.” Christian Century 118, no. 18
(2001): 20-25.

Elahi Maryam. “The Rights of the Child under Islamic Law: Prohibition of the Child Soldier.” In
Children in the Muslim Middle East, edited by Elizabeth Fernea, 367-374. Austin, TX: University
of Texas Press, 1995.

El-Liwaru, Maisha Zoja and Saidi J. El-Liwaru. The Muslim Family Reader: A Builder of the Islamic
Personality. Indianapolis, IN: American Trust Publications, 1988-1989.

El -Shamy, Hasan. “The Brother-Sister Syndrome in Arab Family Life, Socio-Cultural Factors in Arab
Psychiatry: A Critical Review.” International Journal of Sociology of the Family 2 (1981): 313-
23.

Esack, Farid. “In Search of Progressive Islam Beyond 9/11.” In Progressive Muslims, edited by Omid
Safi, 78-97. Oxford: Oneworld Publications, 2003.

Fernea, Elizabeth, ed. Children in the Muslim Middle East. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1996.

---. Remembering Childhood in the Middle East: Memoirs from a Century of Change. Austin, TX:
University of Texas Press, 2003.

Fisherman, Shraga. “Spiritual Identity in Israeli Religious Male Adolescents: Observations and
Educational Implications.” Religious Education 97 (Winter 2002): 61-80.

Updated November 2005 3


Friedl, Erika. Children of Deh Koh: Young Life in an Iranian Village. Ithaca, NY: Syracuse University
Press, 1997.

Fry, C. George. Avicenna’s Philosophy of Education: An Introduction. Washington, D.C.: Three


Continents Press, 1990.

Gaber, Hosny M. Fifty Lessons for Muslim Children. New York: Islamic Center of New York, 1977.

Gedal, Khairie. The Islamic Nashid Book: Islamic Songs for Children in English. Manchester, England:
Rabab, 1997.

Ghazi, Abid Ullah, Abdullah Ali, Yusaf, and Marmaduke William Pickthall. Seven Surahs for the
Classroom. Chicago: IQRA International Educational Foundation, 1996.

Gil’adi, Avner. “ ‘The Child was Small... Not so the Grief for Him’: Sources, Structure and Content of al-
Sakhawi’s Consolation Treatise for Bereaved Parents.” Poetics Today 14 (1993): 367-386.

---. “Children.” The Encyclopaedia of the Qur'an, Vol. I. Leiden, Netherlands: Brill, 2001.

---. Children of Islam: Concepts of Childhood in Medieval Muslim Society. New York: St. Martin's
Press, 1992.

---. “Concepts of Childhood and Attitudes towards Children in Medieval Islam: A Preliminary Study
with Special Reference to Reactions to Infant and Child Mortality.” Journal of the Economic and
Social History of the Orient 32 (1989): 121-152.

---. “Infants, Children and Death in Medieval Muslim Society: Some Preliminary Observations.”
Social History of Medicine 3 (1990): 345-368.

---. Infants, Parents and Wet Nurses: Medieval Islamic Views on Breastfeeding and their Social
Implications. Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1999.

---. “ ‘Their Fragrance is the Fragrance of Heaven’: On Children, Parents and Society in the Muslim
Middle East during the Middle Ages.” Zemanim 53 (1995): 78-87 (Hebrew).

---. “Gender Differences in Child Rearing and Education: Some Observatins with Reference to
Medieval Muslim Thought.” Al-Qantara (Madrid) 16 (1995): 291-308.

---. “History of Childhood in Premodern Muslim Societies.” In Individu et Société dans le Monde
Musulman Méditerranéen, vol. 0: “Etat des lieux,” edited by U. Harmaan et al, 57-68. Paris,
1998.

---. “Islamic Consolation Treatises for Bereaved Parents: Some Bibliographical Notes.” Studia
Islamica 81 (1995): 197-202.

---. “Islam Uygarliginda Bir ‘Cocukluk’ Kavrami Var Mi?” [“Is There a Concept of ‘Childhood’ in
Islamic Civilization?”] in Dunyada ve Turkiye'de Degisen Cocukluk [Changing Childhood in the
World and in Turkey], edited by B. Onur, 105-115. Ankara, 2001.

---. “Sabr (Steadfastness) of Bereaved Parents: A Motif in Medieval Muslim Consolation Treatises
and its Origins.” Jewish Quarterly Review 80 (1989): 35-48.

Updated November 2005 4


---. “Some Observations on Norms of Breastfeeding and Their Social Implications in Premodern
Muslim Societies.” Journal of Family History 23 (1998): 107-123.

---. “Some Observations on Infanticide in Medieval Muslim Society.” International Journal of


Middle Eastern Studies 22 (1990): 185-200.

Granqvist, Hilma. Birth and Childhood among the Arabs: Studies in a Muhammadan Village in Palestine.
Helsingfors-Copenhagen: Söderström & Co., 1947.

Gort, Jerald D., Henry Jansen, and Hendrick M. Vroom, eds. Islam and Children and Family. New York:
Rodopi, 2002.

Haleem, Muhammad Abdel. “The Prophet Muhammad as a Teacher: Implications for Hadith Literature.”
Islamic Quarterly 46, no. 2 (2002): 121-137.

Halstead, J.M. and Mark Halstead. The Case for Muslim Voluntary-Aided Schools: Some Philosophical
Reflections. Cambridge: Islamic Academy, 1989.

Hamadeh, Najila. “Islamic Family Legislation: The Authorative Discourse in Silence.” In Feminism and
Islam, edited by Mehron Tamadorfapr, 331-346. Readings, England: Ithaca Press, 1996.

Hamid, Abdul. “Notes from the Diary of a Medical Inspector of Schools.” Indian Medical Gazette 57
(1922): 169-172.

Hammid, Ammar. Growing Up in an Egyptian Village. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1954.

Haq, S. Anwarul and Ahmad Qureshi. Prophet’s Guidance for Children. Delhi, India: Royal Publishers,
1991.

Hasan, Suhaib. Raising Children in Islam. London: Al-Qur’an Society, 1998.

Hatem, Mervat. “Toward the Study of the Psychodynamics of Mothering and Gender in Egyptian
Families.” International Journal of Middle East Studies 19 (1987): 287-306.

Hathurani, Ahmad Muhammad. Names for Muslim Children. Delhi: Salman Publication, 1992.

Hermansen, Marcia. “How to Put the Genie Back in the Bottle? ‘Identity’ Islam and Muslim Youth
Cultures in America.” In Progressive Muslims: On Justice, Gender and Pluralism, edited by
Omid Safi, 306-319. Oxford: Oneworld, 2003.

---. “Two-way Acculturation.” In The Muslims of America, edited by Yvonne Haddad. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1991.

---. “Keeping the Faith: Convert Muslim Mothers in America and the Transmission of Islamic
Identity.” Forthcoming in volume on female converts to Islam.

---. “Islamic Concepts of Vocation.” In Revisiting the Idea of Vocation, edited by John Haughey, 77-
96. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 2004.

Hewitt, Ibrahim. What does Islam Say?: Abortion, Adoption, AIDS, Animal Welfare, Calendar, Capital
Punishment, Contraception, Crescent, Divorce, Drugs and Alcohol, Environment, Festivals,

Updated November 2005 5


Food and Drink, Homosexuality, Jihad, Marriage, Music, Muslim Schools, Parents and Children,
Racism, Slavery, Suicide, Surrogacy, Women. London: Muslim Educational Trust, 1997.

Hosseini, Kahled. The Kite Runner. New York: Riverhead Trade, 2004.

Houseknecht, Sharon K. and Jerry G. Pankhurst, eds. Family, Religion, and Social Change in Diverse
Societies. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000.

Husain, Akhlaq. Muslim Parents, their Rights and Duties. Delhi: Adam Publishers and Distributors,
1999.

Husayn, Taha. Al-Ayyam. Cairo: Dar al-Ma`arif, 1929.

Hussain, Noshaba. Islamic Studies as a Subject in the British Education System. Leicester: Muslim
Youth Education Council, 1988.

Ibn Baaz, Abdul Azeez ibn Abdullah, Yahya ibn Sa’eed Aale Shalwaan, and Abu Ziyaad Ibn mahmood
Ibn Abdul Ghafoor. Islamic Fataawa Regarding the Muslim Child: More than 150 Fataawa
Concerning the Muslim Child. Essex: Harraf & Harraf, 2001.

Ipgrave, Julia. “Issues in the Delivery of Religious Education to Muslim Pupils: Perspectives from the
Classroom.” British Journal of Religious Education 21 (1999): 146-157.

Jampaklay, Aree. Care and Protection of Children among Thai Muslim Families. Nakhon Pathom,
Thailand: Institute for Population and Social Research, Mahidol University, 1999.

Jeffery, Patricia, Roger Jeffery, and Andrew Lyon. “Ethnic Contrasts and Parallels in the Post Partum
Period: Some Evidence from Bijnor, North India.” In Rites and Beliefs in Modern India, 7-33.
New Delhi: Manohar, 1990.

Joseph, Suad, ed. Intimate Selving in Arab Families: Gender, Self and Identity. Syracuse,NY: Syracuse
University Press, 1999.

---. “Brother/Sister Relationships: Connectivity, Love and Power in the Reproduction of Arab
Patriarchy.” In Arab Society: Class, Gender, Power, and Development, edited by Nicholas S.
Hopkins and Saad Eddine Ibrahim, 227-262. Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press,
1997.

Kassamali, Tahera. Muslim Family Lessons: Raising Children. Richmond, B.C.: Tayyiba Publishers &
Distributors, 1998.

Khan, Rukhsana. Muslim Child: Understanding Islam through Stories and Poems. Morton Grove, IL:
Albert Whitman & Co., 2002.

Küçükcan, Talip. “Community, Identity and Institutionalization of Islamic Education: The Case of Ikra
Primary School in North London.” British Journal of Religious Education 21 (1998): 32-43.

Lahnemann, Johannes, Jorgen S. Nielsen, and Mehdi Razvi. Muslim Children in Europe’s Schools.
Birmingham, UK: Centre for the Study of Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations, Selly Oak
Colleges, 1983.

Updated November 2005 6


Lang, Jeffrey; MeccaCentric Da’Wah Group; University of Iowa; Muslim Students Association; Justice
and Spirituality Publishing. Winning our Children Back to Islam. Herdon, VA: MeccaCentric
Da’Wah Group, 2001.

Laskar, Baharul Islam. “Social Stratification and Child Labor among Muslims: An Exploratory Study.”
Indian Muslims (1999): 203-213.

Last, Murray. “Children and the Experience of Violence: Contrasting Cultures of Punishment in
Northern Nigeria.” Africa 70, no. 3 (2000): 359-393.

LaHurd, Carol Schersten. “Public and Private Realities: Women, Youth, and Family Traditions.” Word
and World 16 (September 1996): 143-150.

Lee-Hui, Lilian Lay-Ean. The Impact of Muslim Women on the Religious Education of their Children in
Egypt. Thesis (M.A.—Miss.) Fuller Theological Seminary, 1993.

Lemu, B. Aisha. Child Upbringing and Moral Teaching in Islam. Minna, Nigeria: IET Publications
Division, Islamic Education Trust, 2001.

---. Islamic Tahdhib and Akhlaq: Theory and Practice. Chicago: IQRA International Educational
Foundation, 1997.

Mahmoudian, Hossein and Carmichael, Gordon A. “An Analysis of Muslim Fertility in Australia Using
the Own-Children Method.” Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 18 (1998): 251-269.

Mallouhi, Christine. Mini-skirts, Mothers and Muslims: Modeling Spiritual Values in Muslim Culture.
England: Sevenoaks, 1994.

Mamiya, Lawrence. “Faith-based Institutions and Family Support Services among African-American
Muslim Masjids and Black Churches.” Journal of the Interdenominational Theological Center
29, no. 1-2 (2001-2002), 25-61.

Maqsood, Ragaiyyah Waris. “Sufism: Principles and Practice.” Muslim World Book Review 21, no. 4
(2001): 55.

Marsot, Afaf L. “The Changing Arab Muslim Family.” In Islam, 243-257. New York: Praeger
Publication, 1984.

Mattson, Ingrid. “Adoption and Fostering.” In Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Cultures, ed. Suad
Joseph. Leiden, Netherlands: Brill, forthcoming.

---. “How Muslims Use Islamic Paradigms to Define America.” In Religion and Immigration, 199-
215. Walnut Creek, CA; Lanham, MD; New York; Oxford: Altamira Press, 2003.

---. “American Muslims’ Special Obligation.” In Taking Back Islam, 1-5. Emmaus, PA: Rodale,
2002.

McCloud, Aminah Beverly. “ ‘This is a Muslim Home’: Signs of Difference in the African-American
Row House.” In Making Muslim Space in North America and Europe, 65-73. Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1996.

Updated November 2005 7


Meijer, Roel, ed. Alienation or Integration of Arab Youth: Between Family, State and Street. Richmond,
Surrey: Curzon, 2000.

Melek, Maysoon. "The Poet Who Helped Shape My Childhood." In Intimate Selving in Arab Families,
edited by Joseph Suad, 77-91. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1999.

Mir'ī, Ibrāhīm al-Dasūqī; Sayyid 'alī, Khalaf al. “Islam and Birth Planning.” In Islam and Family
Planning, vol 2, 109-136. Beirut, Lebanon: International Planned Parenthood Federation, 1974.

Mirzeler, Mustafa Kemal. “The Formation of Male Identity and the Roots of Violence against Women:
The Case of Kurdish Songs, Stories and Storytellers.” Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 20, no.
2 (2000): 261-269.

Moinul Hassan, Syed Khwaja. Rhymes for Muslim Children. Chicago: IQRA International Educational
Foundation, 1992.

Moosa, Ebrahim and Fazlur Rahman, eds. Revival and Reform in Islam: A Study of Islamic
Fundamentalism. Oxford: Oneworld Publishers, 2000.

Moosa, Ebrahim. “The Dilemma of Islamic Rights Schemes.” Journal of Law and Religion 15, no. 1-2
(200-2001): 185-215.

---. “Allegory of the Rule (Hukm): Law as simulacrum in Islam?” History of Religions 38 (1998): 1-
24.

---. “Islam in South Africa.” In Living Faiths in South Africa, 129-154. New York: St. Martin’s
Press, 1995.

---. “Muslim Conservatism in South Africa.” Journal of Theology for Southern Africa 69 (1989): 73-
81.

Motzki, Harold. “Child Marriage in 17th Century Palestine.” In Islamic Legal Interpretation: Muftis and
Their Fatwas, edited by Brinkley Messick and David Powers, 129-140, 347-349. Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, 1996.

Mukhtar, Habib Ullah. Bringing up Children in Islam. New Delhi: Islamic Book Service, 2000.

Najafi, Syed Ibne Hasan Ayaullah Allama. Principles of Education: Upbringing. Karachi: Zahra
Academy, 1993.

Nesin, Aziz. Istanbul Boy: The Autobiography of Aziz Nesin. Translated by J. S. Jacobson. Austin, TX:
University of Texas Press, 1977.

Ostberg, Sissel. “Islamic Nurture and Identity Management: the Lifeworld of Pakistani Children in
Norway.” British Journal of Religious Education 22, no. 2 (Spring 2000): 91-103.

Parker-Jenkins, Marie. Children of Islam: A Teacher's Guide to Meeting the Needs of Muslim Pupils.
London: Trentham Books, 1995.

---. Educating Muslim Children. Nottingham: School of Education, University of Nottingham, 1992.

Updated November 2005 8


---. “Muslim Matters: an Examination of the Educational Needs of Muslim Children in Contemporary
Britain.” American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences 9 (Fall 1992): 351-369.

Peermahomed Ebrahim Trust. Training of Children. Karachi: Peermahomed Ebrahim Trust, 1976.

Prothro, Edwin Terry. Child Rearing in Lebanon. Harvard Middle Eastern Monographs no. 8. Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1961.

Qureshi, Saleem. “The Muslim Family: the Scriptural Framework.” In Muslim Families in North
America, 32-67. Edmonton, Canada: University of Alberta Press, 1991.

Rahbar, Faramarz bin Muhammad. Raising Children According to the Qur’an and Sunnah. Jeddah:
Abul Qasim Publishing House, 1994.

Rashid, Hakim M. “The Socialization of Muslim Children in America: Toward a Conceptual


Framework.” American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences 5 (1988): 205-217.

Rizvi, Sayyid Sa’id Akhtar. Elements of Islamic Studies. Bloomfield, NJ: Pyam-E-Aman, 1989.

Roald, Anne Sofie. Divorce and Child Custody in Islam. Sudan: Amanat al-Nashr bi-al-Ittihad al-Nisa’I
al-Islami al-‘Alami, 1998.

Robinson, Francis. “The Veneration of Teachers in Islam by their Pupils: Its Modern Significance.”
History Today 30, no. 3 (1980): 22-25.

Rooke, Tetz. In My Childhood: a Study of Arabic Autobiography. Stockholm, Sweden: Almquist &
Wiksell International, 1997.

Rugh, Andrea B. Within the Family Circle: Parents and Children in an Arab Village. New York:
Columbia University Press, 1997.

Russell, Vivian. Children in the Middle East. New York: Viking Press, 1977.

Sachedina, Abdulaziz. "Islamic Theology of Christian-Muslim Relations." Islam and Christian- Muslim
Relations 8, no. 1 (1997): 27-38.

Safi, Omid, ed. Progressive Muslims: On Justice, Gender, and Pluralism. Oxford: Oneworld
Publications, 2003.

Saktanber, Ayse. "Muslim Identity in Children's Picture-books." In Islam in Modern Turkey, edited by
Richard Tapper, 171-188. London: I B Tauris & Co., 1991.

Shadid, W. A. R. and P. S. Van Koningsveld, eds. Islam in Dutch Society: Current Developments and
Future Prospects. Kampen: Kok, 1992.

Shamsuddīn, Muhammad Mahdī. “Islam and the Planning of Parenthood: Birth control: its Lawfulness
and Methods.” In Islam and Family Planning. Vol 2, 61-87; 259-262. Beirut: International
Planned Parenthood Federation, 1974.

Sharif, Mian Mohammad. Islamic and Educational Studies. Lahore, Pakistan: Institute of Islamic
Culture, 1964.

Updated November 2005 9


Shell-Duncan, bettina and Ylva Hernlund. Female “Circumcision” in Africa: Culture, Controversy, and
Change. Boulder, CO: Lynne Riener Publishers, 2000.

Siddiqui, Mohammad Abdul Aleen. Elementary Teachings of Islam. Chicago: Kazi Publications, 1995.

Sonbol, Amira. “Adults and Minors in Ottoman Sharia Courts.” In Women, the Family and Divorce Laws
in Islamic History. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1996.

---. “Adoption in Islamic Society: A Historical Survey.” In Children in the Muslim Middle East,
edited by Elizabeth Fernea, 45-64. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1995.

---. Women, the Family, and Divorce Laws in Islamic History. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University
Press, 1996.

Sonyel, Salahi Ramadan. The Silent Minority: Turkish Muslim Children in British Schools. Cambridge:
Islamic Academy, 1988.

Tarazi, Norma. The Child in Islam. Burr Ridge, IL: American Trust Publications, 2001.

Tate, S. Little X: Growing Up in the Nation of Islam. San Francisco: Harper, 1997.

Tuqan, Fadwa. A Mountainous Journey. Translated by Olive Kenny. London: Women’s Press, 1990.

Ullah, Rafi. “The Place of Child in the Muslim Society.” In Islam and Family Planning. Vol 1, 179-183.
Beirut, Lebanon: International Planned Parenthood Federation, 1974.

Ulwan, Abdullah Nasih. Bringing Up Children in Islam. Pakistan: Darul-Isha’at, 2000.

---. Child Education in Islam. Egypt: Dar al-Salam, 2004.

Wahid, Abdul and Afzal Hoosen Elias. Rights of Parents and Children. Benoni, South Africa: A.H.
Elias, 2000.

Waugh, Earle H., ed. Muslim Families in North America. Edmonton, Canada: University of Alberta
Press, 1991.

Wetering, S. van de. “The Arabic Language and Culture Teaching Program to Moroccan Children.” In
Islam in Dutch Society, edited by W. A. R. Shadid, 90-106. Kampen, Netherlands: Kok, 1992.

Woodward, Peter. “Orthodoxy and Openness: the Experience of Muslim Children.” In Freedom and
Authority in Religions and Religious Education, 155-164. London: Cassell, 1996.

Yamani, Muhammad ‘Abdu. Teach your Children to Love the Prophet Muhammad. London: Dar Al-
Taqwa, 1995.

Zine, Yasmin. “Muslim Youth in Canadian Schools: Education and the Politics of Religious Identity.”
Anthropology & Education Quarterly 32 no 4 (2001): 399-423.

Updated November 2005 10

Вам также может понравиться