AJISS, established in 1984, is a quarterly, double blind peer-reviewed and interdisciplinary journal, published by the International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT), and distributed worldwide. The journal showcases a wide variety of scholarly research on all facets of Islam and the Muslim world including subjects such as anthropology, history, philosophy and metaphysics, politics, psychology, religious law, and traditional Islam.
Edtiorial
Articles
Combating Terrorism through an Education for Democratic Iteration
Abstract 616 | PDF Downloads 224Page 1-20
The Islamization of English Literary Studies
Abstract 857 | PDF Downloads 587Page 21-41
A Critical Reassessment of Huntington’s “Clash of Civilizations” Thesis
Abstract 2435 | PDF Downloads 4238Page 42-76
Humanity as Homo Culturus
Abstract 819 | PDF Downloads 287Page 77-102
Book Reviews
Finding Mecca in America
Abstract 697 | PDF Downloads 374Page 103-105
Beyond the “Wild Tribes”
Abstract 487 | PDF Downloads 413Page 105-109
Civil Society and Women Activists in the Middle East
Abstract 732 | PDF Downloads 386Page 109-111
Localizing Islam in Europe
Abstract 518 | PDF Downloads 492Page 112-115
Ottoman Ulema, Turkish Republic
Abstract 542 | PDF Downloads 486Page 115-116
Symbols of Authority in Medieval Islam
Abstract 444 | PDF Downloads 502Page 117-119
Islam, Religion, Practice, Culture and World Order
Abstract 779 | PDF Downloads 569Page 119-122
Modernity, Sexuality, and Ideology in Iran
Abstract 572 | PDF Downloads 437Page 123-125
The Origins of the Shi‘a
Abstract 1399 | PDF Downloads 474Page 125-128
Religion and Revolution
Abstract 641 | PDF Downloads 366Page 128-131
Reports
Islamic Political Thought after the Arab Spring
Abstract 950 | PDF Downloads 341Page 148-150
Prospects and Dimensions of Conflict Resolution Programs in the Islamic Context
Abstract 1111 | PDF Downloads 297Page 150-152
SMIIC Forum 2012
Abstract 622 | PDF Downloads 325Page 153-156
Issue Sample
American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences
Abstract 513 | PDF Downloads 348Page 34
Forum
The Emergence of a Muslim Minority in the Ado-Ekiti Kingdom of Southwestern Nigeria
Abstract 657 | PDF Downloads 2069Page 132-147