Justice is considered the basic norm of human coexistence. Every legal order refers to the
concept of justice and Muslims also regard their religious norms (the Sharia) as offering just
solutions to legal questions. But is the assumption that the Sharia is just merely an
acceptance of a status quo correct? And is justice the necessary aim of the Sharia? In this
volume renowned scholars discuss these questions from different perspectives. In principle
the first normative source of Islam the Qur'an orders justice and fair conduct (Rohe). At the
same time an analysis of the concept of justice in the classical age of Islam (Ahmed and Poya)
also shows that there existed ambivalent understandings of this concept. The relationship of
the idea of justice in Islam to political questions (Ende) to war (Poya) and to modern reform
(Mir-Hosseini) again confirms the importance of the concept for a critical reflection on
traditional assumptions and existing circumstances. The discussion on the hijab in Western
countries (Ladwig) shows paradigmatically how justice can regulate the relationship between the
secular state and the Sharia. The essays in this volume endeavor to show that debates about
justice in Islam as well express an underlying tension between the perception of an order as
just on the one hand and the feeling of injustice under the same order on the other. This
discussion validates the idea that justice should be understood as a concept subject to a
perpetual reexamination according to changing times and circumstances.