Jurisprudence Law at Lebanon

If you're asking about Jurisprudence (Fiqh or Legal Philosophy) in Lebanon, here's an overview that can help, depending on what you're specifically looking for:

Jurisprudence and Law in Lebanon: Overview

1. Legal System of Lebanon

Lebanon has a mixed legal system that combines:

Civil law (primarily based on the French legal system)

Religious law (applied in personal status matters)

Customary practices

2. Sources of Law in Lebanon

The Lebanese Constitution

Statutory Laws (Civil Code, Penal Code, etc.)

International Treaties (e.g., Human Rights treaties)

Religious Laws (for personal status—marriage, divorce, inheritance)

3. Jurisprudence (Legal Theory)

Jurisprudence in Lebanon is not a separate codified subject but is reflected in:

Academic studies in law faculties (in universities like Université Saint-Joseph (USJ), Lebanese University, and Beirut Arab University)

Judicial reasoning in court decisions

Religious legal interpretation in religious courts (Sunni, Shia, Druze, Christian denominations)

4. Religious Jurisprudence

Lebanon allows 18 recognized religious communities to manage personal status laws, and each applies its own form of religious jurisprudence:

Islamic jurisprudence (Fiqh): Sunni and Shia courts follow different schools (Hanafi, Ja'fari).

Christian jurisprudence: Various churches (Maronite, Orthodox, etc.) have canon law.

Druze law: Unique religious laws and courts.

5. Legal Education and Jurisprudence

Universities in Lebanon offer degrees in law (LLB, Master’s, etc.), and jurisprudence is taught as:

Philosophy of law

Legal interpretation

Comparative law

Islamic jurisprudence (in Sharia faculties)

 

 

LEAVE A COMMENT

0 comments