Space Law, Shari'a, and the Legal Place of a Scientific Enterprise

The Case for a Parallel Challenge of Sovereignty

Authors

  • Haris A Durrani Columbia University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/cis.26732

Keywords:

shari'a, space law, legal pluralism, public international law, secularism, modernity

Abstract

This article synthesizes questions of sovereignty in shari'a scholarship today with parallel challenges in the nascent field of space law. Space law’s focus on regulating political, economic, and social factors related to outer space particularly its focus on the “peaceful uses of outer space” against its prevalent military applications— makes space law especially relevant to the “Muslim world,” where Euroamerican dominance of this military high ground represents a specific differential of violence, power, and authority. Using a comparative approach to bring together these two perceived ends of law in their social, political, technological, and religious interactions with modern legal structures, this paper investigates the nature of law and its relationship to sovereignty and the state through differentials of power. Focusing on each field’s debated notions of “law” as opposed to “governance,” the veracity and multiplicity of shared or parallel legal contentions illustrate the challenge (for some, the crisis) of modernity as a legal (and broader) project of differentials of power across legal scopes. This shows that further comparative interrogations of space law and shari'a can continue to produce, and perhaps resolve, similar and pressing questions about the problem of sovereignty in modernity.

Author Biography

  • Haris A Durrani, Columbia University

    Haris A. Durrani is an Egleston Scholar at Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science. He is an Applied Physics Major and a Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies Minor. His published work explores narratives arising at the nexus of law, technology, and disenfranchised identities, particularly in Latino and post-9/11 contexts. His fiction, memoirs, and essays have appeared in Analog Science Fiction and Fact, The 2014 Campbellian Anthology, The New York Review of Science Fiction, and The Best Teen Writing of 2012 (Editor), 2011, and 2010. He is Co-Founder of Columbia’s annual symposium, The Muslim Protagonist. Durrani worked in Boeing Defense, Space, and Security on protecting spacecraft from environmental damage and recently completed a year-long research project with NASA astronaut Michael Massimino on space debris and space law, the results of which he presented at Columbia and at Harvard’s National Collegiate Research Conference. He was interviewed three times on John Hockenberry’s NPR show The Takeaway on youth, identity, and writing.

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Published

2016-10-06

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Durrani, H. A. (2016). Space Law, Shari’a, and the Legal Place of a Scientific Enterprise: The Case for a Parallel Challenge of Sovereignty. Comparative Islamic Studies, 10(1), 27-59. https://doi.org/10.1558/cis.26732